Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Women vote for the first time in Iran, 1963. With the passage of the election law in the first term of the National Assembly of Iran in 1906, the first group to be barred from voting, as well as barred from being candidate and being elected, was women.
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 ...
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 ...
Women in Iran "still live in a system that relegates them to second-class citizens", according to the UN. An Iranian woman without a mandatory headscarf, or hijab, walks in a street in Tehran ...
Islam does not prohibit women from public life however it is the political and cultural climate of Iran that encourages women to practice a private domestic life. Many schools are now inspiring young girls to prepare for tomorrow, as a mother and a wife and as active figures in the involvement of social and political affairs.
Though the quality of research work significantly decreased which caused a significant brain drain. The trend continues and more than 60% of all university students in Iran are women. [89] [90] In 1994, Ali Khamenei, Supreme leader of Iran, declared the percentage of female university was 33% before the Revolution but after that in 2012 it was ...
The society is also known as the Women's Association of the Islamic Republic [4] and the Society of the Women of the Islamic Republic of Iran. [3] The secretary general of the society has been Zahra Mostafavi, a daughter of Ayatollah Khomeini, the founder of the Islamic Republic of Iran. [1] Nida, is the official quarterly organ of the society. [2]