310 Pages
    by Routledge

    310 Pages
    by Routledge

    Having been ruled, more or less continuously, by a range of monarchical dynasties for three millennia, the end of the monarchy in Iran was relatively sudden, taking place in two short years. Since then, Iran has gone through tumultuous change, yet is still apparently caught in a cycle of transition. Iran has now created a complex but unique and non-transferrable system of government, but the question to be asked is whether the Islamic republic has lived up to its founding expectations, serving the Iranian people and helping them to realize their aspirations.

    This book is the first comprehensive analytical study of the forces which have been shaping and changing modern Iran and its relations with the rest of the world. It looks at the roots of the 1979 revolution and the forces unleashed during the modernization process under the Pahlavi monarchy. Applying a range of theoretical approaches to understanding the Islamic republic’s neo-authoritarian political system, Anoushiravan Ehteshami reflects on how the country’s new elite emerged and how these new political forces have changed Iran, the stresses on its political system, the forces shaping the country’s political economy, and the Islamic republic’s international relations. As some of Iran's leaders appear to crave permanent revolution as their means of staying in power, this book argues that the struggle for the soul of the Islamic Republic has mired the country in a cycle of change: Constant reform and transition. The republic finds itself stuck in transition.

    Written in a clear and insightful manner, this book provides an unparalleled analysis of the Islamic Republic of Iran as a major regional actor and gives fresh insights into the political workings of the world’s only Shia, and revolutionary, Islamic republic. It will be of great importance to students and scholars of Middle East Politics and International Relations, as well as the policy community whose gaze is never too far from this unique country.

    Chronology

    Introduction

    Narrating Iran in the twenty-first century

    1 Modern state formation

    Introduction

    Historical legacy

    Emergence of a modern state

    The last Pahlavi

    Revolution

    The birth of the Islamic republic

    2 Politics of the Islamic republic

    Introduction

    Constitutional arrangements

    The first ten years

    The second republic

    1997: Tehran spring

    Neoconservatism rears its head

    Nezam in crisis: Iran’s tenth presidential elections

    Lame duck president?

    2013: clocks go forward or back?

    Political power and nuclear politics

    Authoritarian state, democratic society

    3 Iran’s political economy

    Context

    Iran’s economic development in the post-Second World War period

    Iran’s economy under the Islamic republic

    The nineties: challenging taboos

    Khatami: torn between economics and politics

    Ahmadinomics takes hold

    A new golden age?

    State-society relations under the Islamic republic

    Sanctions and the economy

    After the sanctions

    4 International relations

    Introduction

    Historical features of Iran’s international relations

    International relations of a modern state: the Pahlavis

    International relations of the Islamic republic  

    Conclusion

    Conclusion

    Bibliography

    Index 2

    Biography

    Anoushiravan Ehteshami is Professor of International Relations, and the Nasser al-Mohammad al-Sabah Chair in International Relations and Director of the HH Sheikh Nasser al-Mohammad al-Sabah Programme in International Relations, Regional Politics and Security at Durham University.

    "Iran: Stuck in Transition exemplifies the best of Ehteshami’s scholarship. It is meticulously researched and heavily referenced. Any serious study of contemporary Iran must necessarily take into account Ehteshami’s arguments and analyses here." - Mehran Kamrava, Georgetown University, Qatar; review in Iranian Studies

    "Iran, Stuck in Transition is another fascinating intellectual enterprise by prolific Durham College University professor Anoushiravan Ehteshami. This book is an analysis of various aspects of post-revolutionary Iranian politics. The angle that Ehteshami picked for his analysis makes it unique among the intellectual works in this area. He provides a nuanced portrayal of Iranian politics that casts light on how seemingly conservative and status-quo-oriented “social and political forces in a revolutionary environment” respond to the tides of change from within and without of the polity (p. 2)." - Nima Baghdadi, Florida International University