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for Women's and Family Affairs: 2013 — 9 Elham Aminzadeh: Vice President for Legal Affairs 2013: 2016 — Hassan Rouhani: 10 Shahindokht Molaverdi: Vice President for Women's and Family Affairs: 2013: 2019 Islamic Iran Participation Front: 11 Zahra Ahmadipour: Head of Cultural Heritage, Handicrafts and Tourism Organization: 2016: 2017
Islamic Iran Participation Front (sympathizer) 2000–04: 27 Elaheh Koulaei: Tehran, Rey, Shemiranat and Eslamshahr: Islamic Iran Participation Front: 2000–04: 28 Akram Mosavarimanesh: Isfahan: Islamic Iran Participation Front: 2000–04: 29 Hamideh Edalat: Dashtestan: Islamic Iran Participation Front: 2000–04: 30 Tahereh Rezazadeh: Shiraz ...
In 1962, Iranian women given the right to vote with the approval of a bill by the Cabinet of Iran. Under the bill, women would be allowed to be candidates and run in elections. But a few months later, the bill was rejected due to disagreements over several paragraphs of the bill between Iranian Islamic scholars and government officials.
One of Iran's most prominent human rights activists, Mohammadi, 51, worked as an engineer and a columnist for various newspapers following her studies. She was first arrested in 2011 for assisting ...
The Iranian Women's Rights Movement (Persian: جنبش زنان ایران), is the social movement for women's rights of the women in Iran. The movement first emerged after the Iranian Constitutional Revolution in 1910, the year in which the first women's periodical was published by women.
A few weeks after it began, the scale and intensity of Iran’s uprising are tangibly diminishing an already weak regime in Tehran.. Women, who for more than four decades bore the brunt of the ...
Iranian women rights activists determined education is a key for the country's women and society; they argued giving women education was best for Iran because mothers would raise better sons for their country. [96] Many Iranian women, including Jaleh Amouzgar, Eliz Sanasarian, Janet Afary, and Alenush Terian have been influential in the sciences.
Nahid Taghavi, an Iranian-German women's rights activist, has been released from prison and is back in Germany after more than four years incarceration in Iran, Amnesty International said on Monday.