RELATED PULITZER CENTER REPORTS
THE WOMEN’S MOVEMENT
Women’s rights activist Nahid Keshavarz writes a letter from Evin Prison.
An update on the state of the women’s rights movement in Iran from NPR.
Six women’s rights activists receive lengthy prison sentences.
A video about women’s Karate in Tehran.
TEHRAN’S ART SCENE
Martyrs and Clerics: An exhibit of Iran’s revolutionary murals.
REPRODUCTIVE RIGHTS AND FAMILY PLANNING
Iran has experienced dramatic demographic change in the last decade.
Iran as a model for family planning.
United Nations report on Iran’s success in population control.
Iran offers some of the most progressive fertility treatment in the Muslim world.
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Understanding Iran
On the surface, Iran is simply a theocracy in a standoff with the United States. But access to the everyday lives of Iranians gives a window into the country's complex web of culture, religion and politics.
Despite decades of repressive leadership, Iran arguably has the longest-lived democratic movement in the Middle East. That democracy saw the election of current hard-line President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, but it's also seen the survival and regrouping of reformist groups in the face of mounting government pressure. Many advocates for reform in Iran argue that change can only come from within, and that it will come slowly.
The U.S. media has little access to Iran and it's the nuclear issue that dominates the headlines here. Meanwhile, Iranian dissidents say they are experiencing the worst government crackdown in two decades as Ahmadinejad faces growing criticism from within for his economic policies.
One way we can come to understand Iran is through the country's young people. Seventy percent of Iran's more than 70 million people are under 30 years old. This means most of the population doesn't remember life before the 1979 revolution.
In a series of audio, web and print reports which can be found in the left-hand column of this page (Articles/Interviews), journalist Jessie Graham explores how the increasing tensions between Iran and the United States are affecting the lives of regular Iranians. This project offers a glimpse into how Iranians envision their version of democracy and how they see their country's future.
Jessie Graham
Jessie Graham is a radio and print journalist who covers international issues. Most recently, she has reported for BBC/PRI's The World from Iraq, Sri Lanka, Guantanamo Bay, Sierra Leone, Ghana and Liberia, as well as throughout the United States....
Click on name above for full bio
UNDERSTANDING IRAN
Iran 101: Vali Nasr, a professor of Middle East and South Asia Politics at the Naval Postgraduate School in California, offers his list of the books to read for an introduction to Iran.What’s Left of Reform: Negar Azimi looks at the state of Iran’s reform movement under Ahmadinejad.
The President: The blog of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
The Leader: The official website of the Supreme Leader, Ayotollah Khamenei.
POWER AND PROTEST
Human Rights Watch’s reports on Iran.
The website of Iranian human rights activist Ehmad Baghi.
Persian Bloggers Take Flight: A book about Iranian blogging culture.
Blogger Omid Memarian writes about democracy and civil society in Iran.