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Azam Khatam

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Azam Khatam

Azam Khatam is a Research Affiliate at The City Institute, York University. She completed her PhD in the Faculty of Environmental Studies at York University in 2015. Dr. Khatam has previously worked as a urban planner and sociologist in Tehran in the 1990s and 2000s. Her publications include “Struggles over defining the moral city: Islam and urban public life in Iran,” in Herrera and Bayat (eds.) The Making of Muslim Youths: New Cultural Politics in the Global South and North; “The Space Reloaded: Publics and Politics on Enqelab Street in Tehran,” in Sharp and Panetta (eds.) Urbanism and the Arab Uprisings, Beyond the Square.

The Latest from Azam Khatam

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2 Results
Decentralization and Ambiguities of Local Politics in Tehran
معهد الشرق الأوسط
  • التحليل
  • Decentralization and Ambiguities of Local Politics in Tehran

    The prospect of establishing direct popular elections for mayors has precipitated a heated debate in Iran, resulting in divisions within the conservative and reformist factions and even a reversal of their roles. The debate surrounding the bill and the forces that render urban governance as political stem from the coupling of decentralization of governance with the arbitrary and despotic rule of mayors over urban matters. Decentralization in non-democratic settings has led to the reorientation of municipalities from merely managerial authorities to institutions that are both the field for, and the target of political struggles between elites and by citizens. Such localization of political life, especially in large cities such as Tehran, has the potential for making urban policy-making less opaque and bureaucratized as it has been under the Pahlavi Monarchy and the Islamic Republic.

    January 14, 2016

    Back to the Future: Bazaar Strikes, Three Decades after the Iranian Revolution
  • التحليل
  • Back to the Future: Bazaar Strikes, Three Decades after the Iranian Revolution

    This essay series examines the roles that community-based organizations (CBOs) have played as active participants in the process of “governing” megacitieswhether in service delivery, risk mitigation, or the creation of

    January 29, 2009

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