Skip to main content

LUP Student Papers

LUND UNIVERSITY LIBRARIES

Kvinnor,makt och politik i Iran

Holmäng, Hanna LU (2014) STVK02 20141
Department of Political Science
Abstract
Using Steven Luke’s famous Three-Dimensional Power theory this thesis aims to explain how much political power the Iranian women had during the secular Pahlavi era compared to the Islamic Republic of today. I will outline the reasons for change of formal and informal power structures from 1942-2010.I find that Iranian political system has a complex structure with a multitude of loosely connected power centres. There are very few women in the formal political sphere and women are excluded from law-makers. Women are generally highly educated but there is a high unemployment rate among them. There are an increasing number of autonomous women organisations today compared to the Pahlavi era calling for peaceful reforms and liberation of the... (More)
Using Steven Luke’s famous Three-Dimensional Power theory this thesis aims to explain how much political power the Iranian women had during the secular Pahlavi era compared to the Islamic Republic of today. I will outline the reasons for change of formal and informal power structures from 1942-2010.I find that Iranian political system has a complex structure with a multitude of loosely connected power centres. There are very few women in the formal political sphere and women are excluded from law-makers. Women are generally highly educated but there is a high unemployment rate among them. There are an increasing number of autonomous women organisations today compared to the Pahlavi era calling for peaceful reforms and liberation of the Islamic system (within limits set by the constitution). They are together with the semi-opposition and cooperation with the parliament able to bring up issues on the national agenda (dimension 2). Beside the legal barriers there are old cultural and historical attitudes to overcome. Among the post-revolutionary generation the attitudes are changing due to e.g. higher education. Iranian women today are more and more accepted in the public sphere which is necessary for achieving more political power. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
Holmäng, Hanna LU
supervisor
organization
course
STVK02 20141
year
type
M2 - Bachelor Degree
subject
keywords
Iran, Politics, Women, Power
language
Swedish
id
4362650
date added to LUP
2014-04-28 12:36:35
date last changed
2014-04-28 12:36:35
@misc{4362650,
  abstract     = {{Using Steven Luke’s famous Three-Dimensional Power theory this thesis aims to explain how much political power the Iranian women had during the secular Pahlavi era compared to the Islamic Republic of today. I will outline the reasons for change of formal and informal power structures from 1942-2010.I find that Iranian political system has a complex structure with a multitude of loosely connected power centres. There are very few women in the formal political sphere and women are excluded from law-makers. Women are generally highly educated but there is a high unemployment rate among them. There are an increasing number of autonomous women organisations today compared to the Pahlavi era calling for peaceful reforms and liberation of the Islamic system (within limits set by the constitution). They are together with the semi-opposition and cooperation with the parliament able to bring up issues on the national agenda (dimension 2). Beside the legal barriers there are old cultural and historical attitudes to overcome. Among the post-revolutionary generation the attitudes are changing due to e.g. higher education. Iranian women today are more and more accepted in the public sphere which is necessary for achieving more political power.}},
  author       = {{Holmäng, Hanna}},
  language     = {{swe}},
  note         = {{Student Paper}},
  title        = {{Kvinnor,makt och politik i Iran}},
  year         = {{2014}},
}