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الديمقراطية في إيران

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لقد كان توقيت هذا الكتاب ملائما ومتزامنا مع قضية مهمة وهي الصعوبات التي واجهت عملية إرساء الديمقراطية في الجمهورية الإسلامية . لقد كتب بارسا كتاب (الديمقراطية) مستخدما ثروة من المواد الأولية (المقابلات والصحف وأحدث المذكرات)، ويعتبر الكتاب العمل الذي يركز على الحركة الخضراء كحركة اجتماعية مستندة إلى المجتمع الأكبر ويحتوي على أفكار قيمة حول مشكلات إرساء الديمقراطية

أروند إبراهيميان

منذ عقود ألقى بارسا الضوء على الحركات الاجتماعية والسياسية في إيران بتجاوز المجادلات والعلوم الدينية لتطبيق أدوات التحليل الاجتماعي الصارمة، لذلك حلل بارسا الحركة الخضراء في إيران بذات الطريقة المتعمقة، وأي أحد يريد أن يفهم الوضع الراهن في البلاد يجب أن يقرأ هذا الكتاب، لأنه عارض الأوهام التي بنتها مراكز وصفحات مقالات الرأي داخل الطريق الدائري.

جون كول

499 pages, Paperback

Published January 1, 2018

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About the author

Misagh Parsa

4 books5 followers

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Murtaza.
713 reviews3,386 followers
October 3, 2020
Very grim appraisal of the track record and future of the Islamic Republic of Iran. The government has politicized all spheres of life from culture to economy while cutting out an ever-widening proportion of society from political power. As Parsa describes, the regime is essentially a polarized faction at odds with the population but lording over it by virtue of having control of the state. Its track record of failure in various fields is laid out here in painstaking detail. Alienated from the people, the people are also alienated back in turn. Even among conservatives the space for who is acceptable has narrowed further and further, while the failures of the narrow ruling elite pile up. In such a situation pathways to reform are constricted and revolution becomes a more likely outcome.

Parsa compares the development of Iran with that of South Korea, which started from a similar low and authoritarian base but managed to develop towards democracy. The presence of oil in Iran seems to have played a negative political role, as it encouraged and legitimized state intervention in the economy instead of allowing zones of autonomous socio-economic life to grow. The revolutionary decision by the clergy to become directly involved in politics, even governing the country itself, has removed them from their once-esteemed role in society and discredited their ideology in the eyes of many Iranians. The elites of the regime are unlikely to compromise because they lack good exit strategies or opportunities in a democratized Iran, Parsa argues. The stranglehold works well for them both politically and economically, while few appealing alternatives beckon.

Revolutions are always possible but it also seems possible that the Islamic Republic could continue stumbling along more or less indefinitely, growing its repressive capacities in the face of popular discontent. Parsa seems to assume that democratization is an inevitability, or that history proceeds teleologically in a Francis Fukuyama-ish way. Recent events in the ostensible democratic heartlands of the West suggest that this may not be the case. Iranians are people who hold themselves to a high standard, and, as this book argues, the record of the Islamic Republic has been poor enough to win the enmity of many of them. Parsa makes a careful case for why the current regime is unlikely to make significant compromises anytime soon and faces imminent threats to its existence. Despite that, nothing is inevitable and similar predictions can be found at least as far back as the 1990s.
1,610 reviews24 followers
June 18, 2021
This book is an academic political science text that looks at Iran since the Islamic Revolution in the 1970s. The author follows the history up to the present, showing how the Iranian people wanted more freedom and democracy, but the regime is focused on creating an Islamic theocracy and promoting Islamic cultural values. The author gives detailed descriptions of events, and uses political science terminology and methods to analyze the history. The author's conclusion is that attempts at reforming the system have failed, and it can only be overthrown by revolution. I would have liked more detail about how the author thinks this could work, but I thought it was both an excellent history and great analysis.
Profile Image for Faisal Aljuhani.
38 reviews4 followers
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April 25, 2020
أولى قراءاتي في الشأن الإيراني يشرح الكتاب عن التطور والتحول السياسي في إيران بعد الثورة الإسلامية ويحاول أن يثبت بأن الثورة الإيرانيه لم تكن دينية. وكيف تحول خطاب المرشد من مبدأ الحريات إلى القمع . ذكر الكاتب في العنوان يرى الكاتب بصعوبة إصلاح النظام الإيراني من داخل النظام ولذلك بسبب ممانعة النظام لأي إصلاح لذلك يرى بأن الثورة قادمة للإطاحة بالنظام الإسلامي الإيراني



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