Social Construction of Population Policies and Problems in Iran Since 1963

IF 0.8 3区 社会学 Q2 AREA STUDIES Middle East Critique Pub Date : 2023-11-09 DOI:10.1080/19436149.2023.2268860
Abouali Vedadhir, Seyedhadi Marjaei
{"title":"Social Construction of Population Policies and Problems in Iran Since 1963","authors":"Abouali Vedadhir, Seyedhadi Marjaei","doi":"10.1080/19436149.2023.2268860","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Abstract:Population has been and continues to be a significant matter of concern and contention in Iran. A range of different claims-makers, with varying dramas, ideologies, resources, rhetorical strategies and schemas have made claims that name and frame the population problem in particular ways to influence policy processes, and the experiences, meanings, and practices of people in everyday life. As a result, since 1967, mainly in post-revolutionary Iran, there has been the rise and fall of contesting narratives of the population as a social problem. Drawing on theoretical insights from social constructionism, we track these debates. In particular, we are interested in how claims-makers use rhetorical strategies and mobilize resources to convince others and to influence policy processes through social problem games and works. In other words, we examine the claims-making activities around the population as a social problem over the last half-century in Iran, showing how an understanding of these activities can enrich our understanding of definitional processes. We also discuss how certain discourses, policies and social constructions of population and family planning have become dominant and have influenced cultural meanings, popular images and the daily life experiences of people, particularly women and their prospects of reproduction and motherhood, for the most part, in the shadow of interpretations of Islamic Sharia law enforced since the 1979 Revolution. Building on the constructionist analysis and interoperation of contesting anti-natalist and pronatalist claims and policies over the last half-century in Iran, this article highlights how images of population problems are constructed socio-culturally with actual impact on individuals’ everyday lives in society, and how people find ways to respond, resist and counter the dominant discourses and policies about family planning, population and reproduction and family. Hence, the contesting claims, definitions and discourses around population have not been merely abstract points of debate, but they have penetrated the emotions, memories, relationships, prospects and practices of people in Iran. The results reveal that there are several existing and emerging dialectics, paradoxes, and uncertainties on population policies and problems at multiple levels, with each of these definitions having key insights and implications for policy-related scientific research (science), the policy process and its outcomes, reproductive prospects and the practices of people (public).Key Words: Claims-making activitiesIranpopulation policiesreproductionsocial constructionism AcknowledgmentsWe are warmly grateful to Professor Dorothy Pawluch (McMaster University) for her enduring contributions to social constructionism and for her valuable ideas on the very first draft of this manuscript. We also would like to thank Professor Mahmoud Ghazi Tabatabaei (University of Tehran) and Dr. S. M. Hani Sadati (The Centre for Community Based Research & McGill University) for their contributions to earlier versions of the manuscript. We also thank Dr. Fahimeh Ahmadian-Yazdi for her exceptional formatting work on this manuscript.Disclosure StatementThe authors reported no conflict of interest in the research for or writing of this article.Notes1 Akbar Aghajanian (1991) Population Change in Iran, 1966-86: A Stalled Demographic Transition? Population and Development Review, 17(4), pp. 703-715.2 Mohammad Jalal Abbasi-Shavazi, Amir Mehryar, Gavin Jones, and Peter McDonald (Citation2002). Revolution, War and Modernization: Population policy and fertility change in Iran, Journal of population research, 19(1), pp. 25-46.3 Ibid.4 Aghajanian, “Population.”5 Ibid.6 Marie Ladier-Fouladi (Citation2021) The Islamic Republic of Iran’s New Population Policy and Recent Changes in Fertility, Iranian Studies 54 (5-6), pp. 907-930.7 Farshad Farzadfar, Mohsen Naghavi & Sadaf G. Sepanlou (2022) Health system performance in Iran: A systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2019, The Lancet, 399, pp. 1625–1645.8 Nader Mehri, Mahmood Messkoub and Suzanne Kunkel (Citation2020) Trends, Determinants and the Implications of Population Aging in Iran, Ageing International, 45(4), pp. 327-343.9 Goodarz Danaei, et al. (Citation2019) Iran in transition, The Lancet, 393(10184), pp. 1984-2005; and Farzadfar, et.al., Health.10 Ali Asghar Pilehvar (Citation2021) Spatial-geographical analysis of urbanization in Iran, Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, 8(1), pp. 1-12.11 Mohammad Saleh Ali-Taleshi, Sadat Feiznia, and Mauro Masiol (Citation2022) Seasonal and spatial variations of atmospheric depositions-bound elements over Tehran megacity, Iran: Pollution levels, PMF-based source apportionment, and risks assessment, Urban Climate, 42, 101113.12 Danaei, et al. “Iran in transition.”13 Homayoun Sadeghi-Bazargani, et al. (Citation2022). Setting research priorities to achieve long-term national road safety goals in Iran, Journal of global health (12).14 Djavad Salehi-Isfahani (Citation2002) Population, human capital, and economic growth in Iran. In I. Sirageldin (Ed.), Human Capital and Population in the Middle East. (London: I. B. Tauris and Cairo, American University of Cairo Press).15 Hassan Joulaei, Kamran Bagheri Lankarani, Saeed Shahabi, et al. (Citation2022), Critical Analysis of Corruption in Iran’s Health Care System and Its Control Strategies, Shiraz E-Medical Journal, 23(3).16 Homa Katouzian (Citation2012) Iranian History and Politics, the Dialectic of State and Society, (London: Routledge).17 Mir-Taher Mousavi and M. Sheiyani (Citation2015) Social Capital and Social Health, (Tehran: Aghah) (in Persian); and18 Joel Best (Citation2017) Social Problems (3rd edition). (NY: W.W. Norton & Company).19 Donileen R. Loseke (Citation2017) Thinking about Social Problems: An Introduction to Constructionist Perspective, (Boca Raton, FL: Routledge).20 Best, “Social Problems.”21 Stephen Hilgartner and Charles L. Bosk (Citation1988). The Rise and Fall of Social Problems: A Public Arenas Model, American Journal of Sociology, 94(1), pp. 53–78.22 Ibid, p. 8723 Mahmood Ghazi Tabatabaei and Abouali Vedadhir (Citation2013) The Good, The Bad and the Ugly: Rise and Fall of Population Issues in Iran, Paper Presented at The Society for the Study of Social Problems (SSSP), New York, NY (10-12 August).24 Homa Hoodfar and Samad Assadpour (Citation2000) The Politics of Population Policy in the Islamic Republic of Iran,” Studies in Family Planning, 31(1), pp. 19-34.25 Abbasi-Shavazi, et al. “Revolution.”26 Hoodfar and Assadpour, “The Politics.”27 Aghajanian, “Population;” and Abbasi-Shavazi, “Recent.”28 Hoodfar and Assadpour, “The Politics.”29 Abbasi-Shavazi, Mehryar Jones, and McDonald, “Revolution.”30 Hatam Hosseini (Citation2012) Demographic Transition, Window of Opportunity, and Population Bonus: Toward a New Population Policy in Iran. Paper Presented at the European Population Conference, Stockholm, Sweden (13-16 June).31 Abbasi-Shavazi, et al. “Revolution;” and Amir H. Mehryar, Farzaneh Roudi, Akbar Agajanian and Farzaneh Tajdini32 Ladier-Fouladi, “The Islamic.”33 Karim Mahmoodi, Ahmad Mohammadpur and Mehdi Rezaei (Citation2015) A discourse analysis of population policies in the context of politics in Iran, Quality & Quantity, 49, pp. 1883–1895.34 Abbasi-Shavazi, et al. “The Fertility.”35 Meimanat Hosseini-Chavoshi, Mohammad Jalal Abbasi-Shavazi & Peter McDonald (Citation2016) Fertility, Marriage, and Family Planning in Iran: Implications for Future Policy, Population Horizons, 13(1), pp. 31–40.36 Ladier-Fouladi, “The Islamic.”37 Mahmoud Ghazi Tabatabaei and AbouAli Vedadhir (2013) The Good, The Bad and the Ugly: Rise and Fall of Population Issues in Iran, paper presented at SSSP conference, New York.38 Mahmoodi, et al. “A discourse.”39 Hosseini-Chavoshi, et al. “Fertility”.40 Kobra Khazali (Citation2012) Iran has a capacity of 400 million people, at: Entekhab (News Code: 78127) (in Persian).41 Talha Burki (Citation2022) Iran's population policy: Consequences for youth, The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health.42 Government of The Islamic Republic of Iran (Citation2022) President issues special order to develop 7th Development Plan based on policies announced by the Supreme Leader.43 Serap Kavas and Arland Thornton (Citation2020) Developmental Idealism and Beliefs About Marriage and Fertility in Turkey, Population Research and Policy Review, 39, pp. 47–75.44 Hosseini, “Demographic.”45 Mahmoodi, et al. “A discourse”.46 Mohammad Mirzaie (Citation2020) Iran's population is not ageing! 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Mirzaie), available at: Borna News (News Code: 1004012) (in Persian).47 Zahra Sokhtanloo and Azam Rahmatabad (Citation2013) Delimitation of the Shia generation: causes of population decline and its consequences, Knowledge (Marefat) 189 (Special issue on Population Dynamics) pp. 45-58 (in Persian).48 Editorial: eClinical Medicine (Citation2022) Inside the grief of Iranians: the continued fight for human (women's) rights. eClinicalMedicine 52:101719.","PeriodicalId":44822,"journal":{"name":"Middle East Critique","volume":" 4","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.8000,"publicationDate":"2023-11-09","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Middle East Critique","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1080/19436149.2023.2268860","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"社会学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"AREA STUDIES","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

Abstract:Population has been and continues to be a significant matter of concern and contention in Iran. A range of different claims-makers, with varying dramas, ideologies, resources, rhetorical strategies and schemas have made claims that name and frame the population problem in particular ways to influence policy processes, and the experiences, meanings, and practices of people in everyday life. As a result, since 1967, mainly in post-revolutionary Iran, there has been the rise and fall of contesting narratives of the population as a social problem. Drawing on theoretical insights from social constructionism, we track these debates. In particular, we are interested in how claims-makers use rhetorical strategies and mobilize resources to convince others and to influence policy processes through social problem games and works. In other words, we examine the claims-making activities around the population as a social problem over the last half-century in Iran, showing how an understanding of these activities can enrich our understanding of definitional processes. We also discuss how certain discourses, policies and social constructions of population and family planning have become dominant and have influenced cultural meanings, popular images and the daily life experiences of people, particularly women and their prospects of reproduction and motherhood, for the most part, in the shadow of interpretations of Islamic Sharia law enforced since the 1979 Revolution. Building on the constructionist analysis and interoperation of contesting anti-natalist and pronatalist claims and policies over the last half-century in Iran, this article highlights how images of population problems are constructed socio-culturally with actual impact on individuals’ everyday lives in society, and how people find ways to respond, resist and counter the dominant discourses and policies about family planning, population and reproduction and family. Hence, the contesting claims, definitions and discourses around population have not been merely abstract points of debate, but they have penetrated the emotions, memories, relationships, prospects and practices of people in Iran. The results reveal that there are several existing and emerging dialectics, paradoxes, and uncertainties on population policies and problems at multiple levels, with each of these definitions having key insights and implications for policy-related scientific research (science), the policy process and its outcomes, reproductive prospects and the practices of people (public).Key Words: Claims-making activitiesIranpopulation policiesreproductionsocial constructionism AcknowledgmentsWe are warmly grateful to Professor Dorothy Pawluch (McMaster University) for her enduring contributions to social constructionism and for her valuable ideas on the very first draft of this manuscript. We also would like to thank Professor Mahmoud Ghazi Tabatabaei (University of Tehran) and Dr. S. M. Hani Sadati (The Centre for Community Based Research & McGill University) for their contributions to earlier versions of the manuscript. We also thank Dr. Fahimeh Ahmadian-Yazdi for her exceptional formatting work on this manuscript.Disclosure StatementThe authors reported no conflict of interest in the research for or writing of this article.Notes1 Akbar Aghajanian (1991) Population Change in Iran, 1966-86: A Stalled Demographic Transition? Population and Development Review, 17(4), pp. 703-715.2 Mohammad Jalal Abbasi-Shavazi, Amir Mehryar, Gavin Jones, and Peter McDonald (Citation2002). Revolution, War and Modernization: Population policy and fertility change in Iran, Journal of population research, 19(1), pp. 25-46.3 Ibid.4 Aghajanian, “Population.”5 Ibid.6 Marie Ladier-Fouladi (Citation2021) The Islamic Republic of Iran’s New Population Policy and Recent Changes in Fertility, Iranian Studies 54 (5-6), pp. 907-930.7 Farshad Farzadfar, Mohsen Naghavi & Sadaf G. Sepanlou (2022) Health system performance in Iran: A systematic analysis for the Global Burden of Disease Study 2019, The Lancet, 399, pp. 1625–1645.8 Nader Mehri, Mahmood Messkoub and Suzanne Kunkel (Citation2020) Trends, Determinants and the Implications of Population Aging in Iran, Ageing International, 45(4), pp. 327-343.9 Goodarz Danaei, et al. (Citation2019) Iran in transition, The Lancet, 393(10184), pp. 1984-2005; and Farzadfar, et.al., Health.10 Ali Asghar Pilehvar (Citation2021) Spatial-geographical analysis of urbanization in Iran, Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, 8(1), pp. 1-12.11 Mohammad Saleh Ali-Taleshi, Sadat Feiznia, and Mauro Masiol (Citation2022) Seasonal and spatial variations of atmospheric depositions-bound elements over Tehran megacity, Iran: Pollution levels, PMF-based source apportionment, and risks assessment, Urban Climate, 42, 101113.12 Danaei, et al. “Iran in transition.”13 Homayoun Sadeghi-Bazargani, et al. (Citation2022). Setting research priorities to achieve long-term national road safety goals in Iran, Journal of global health (12).14 Djavad Salehi-Isfahani (Citation2002) Population, human capital, and economic growth in Iran. In I. Sirageldin (Ed.), Human Capital and Population in the Middle East. (London: I. B. Tauris and Cairo, American University of Cairo Press).15 Hassan Joulaei, Kamran Bagheri Lankarani, Saeed Shahabi, et al. (Citation2022), Critical Analysis of Corruption in Iran’s Health Care System and Its Control Strategies, Shiraz E-Medical Journal, 23(3).16 Homa Katouzian (Citation2012) Iranian History and Politics, the Dialectic of State and Society, (London: Routledge).17 Mir-Taher Mousavi and M. Sheiyani (Citation2015) Social Capital and Social Health, (Tehran: Aghah) (in Persian); and18 Joel Best (Citation2017) Social Problems (3rd edition). (NY: W.W. Norton & Company).19 Donileen R. Loseke (Citation2017) Thinking about Social Problems: An Introduction to Constructionist Perspective, (Boca Raton, FL: Routledge).20 Best, “Social Problems.”21 Stephen Hilgartner and Charles L. Bosk (Citation1988). The Rise and Fall of Social Problems: A Public Arenas Model, American Journal of Sociology, 94(1), pp. 53–78.22 Ibid, p. 8723 Mahmood Ghazi Tabatabaei and Abouali Vedadhir (Citation2013) The Good, The Bad and the Ugly: Rise and Fall of Population Issues in Iran, Paper Presented at The Society for the Study of Social Problems (SSSP), New York, NY (10-12 August).24 Homa Hoodfar and Samad Assadpour (Citation2000) The Politics of Population Policy in the Islamic Republic of Iran,” Studies in Family Planning, 31(1), pp. 19-34.25 Abbasi-Shavazi, et al. “Revolution.”26 Hoodfar and Assadpour, “The Politics.”27 Aghajanian, “Population;” and Abbasi-Shavazi, “Recent.”28 Hoodfar and Assadpour, “The Politics.”29 Abbasi-Shavazi, Mehryar Jones, and McDonald, “Revolution.”30 Hatam Hosseini (Citation2012) Demographic Transition, Window of Opportunity, and Population Bonus: Toward a New Population Policy in Iran. Paper Presented at the European Population Conference, Stockholm, Sweden (13-16 June).31 Abbasi-Shavazi, et al. “Revolution;” and Amir H. Mehryar, Farzaneh Roudi, Akbar Agajanian and Farzaneh Tajdini32 Ladier-Fouladi, “The Islamic.”33 Karim Mahmoodi, Ahmad Mohammadpur and Mehdi Rezaei (Citation2015) A discourse analysis of population policies in the context of politics in Iran, Quality & Quantity, 49, pp. 1883–1895.34 Abbasi-Shavazi, et al. “The Fertility.”35 Meimanat Hosseini-Chavoshi, Mohammad Jalal Abbasi-Shavazi & Peter McDonald (Citation2016) Fertility, Marriage, and Family Planning in Iran: Implications for Future Policy, Population Horizons, 13(1), pp. 31–40.36 Ladier-Fouladi, “The Islamic.”37 Mahmoud Ghazi Tabatabaei and AbouAli Vedadhir (2013) The Good, The Bad and the Ugly: Rise and Fall of Population Issues in Iran, paper presented at SSSP conference, New York.38 Mahmoodi, et al. “A discourse.”39 Hosseini-Chavoshi, et al. “Fertility”.40 Kobra Khazali (Citation2012) Iran has a capacity of 400 million people, at: Entekhab (News Code: 78127) (in Persian).41 Talha Burki (Citation2022) Iran's population policy: Consequences for youth, The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health.42 Government of The Islamic Republic of Iran (Citation2022) President issues special order to develop 7th Development Plan based on policies announced by the Supreme Leader.43 Serap Kavas and Arland Thornton (Citation2020) Developmental Idealism and Beliefs About Marriage and Fertility in Turkey, Population Research and Policy Review, 39, pp. 47–75.44 Hosseini, “Demographic.”45 Mahmoodi, et al. “A discourse”.46 Mohammad Mirzaie (Citation2020) Iran's population is not ageing! (An interview with M. Mirzaie), available at: Borna News (News Code: 1004012) (in Persian).47 Zahra Sokhtanloo and Azam Rahmatabad (Citation2013) Delimitation of the Shia generation: causes of population decline and its consequences, Knowledge (Marefat) 189 (Special issue on Population Dynamics) pp. 45-58 (in Persian).48 Editorial: eClinical Medicine (Citation2022) Inside the grief of Iranians: the continued fight for human (women's) rights. eClinicalMedicine 52:101719.
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1963年以来伊朗人口政策与问题的社会建构
摘要:在伊朗,人口一直是并将继续是一个令人关注和争论的重大问题。一系列不同的主张制造者,凭借不同的戏剧、意识形态、资源、修辞策略和模式,以特定的方式命名和框架人口问题,以影响政策过程,以及人们在日常生活中的经验、意义和实践。因此,自1967年以来,主要是在革命后的伊朗,关于人口作为一个社会问题的不同叙述起起落落。借鉴社会建构主义的理论见解,我们追踪这些争论。特别是,我们感兴趣的主张制造者如何使用修辞策略和调动资源来说服他人,并通过社会问题游戏和作品影响政策过程。换句话说,我们研究了过去半个世纪在伊朗作为一个社会问题的围绕人口的索赔活动,展示了对这些活动的理解如何丰富我们对定义过程的理解。我们还讨论了某些关于人口和计划生育的话语、政策和社会结构如何占据主导地位,并影响了文化意义、大众形象和人们的日常生活经历,特别是妇女及其生育和母性前景,这在很大程度上是在对1979年革命以来实施的伊斯兰教法的解释的阴影下进行的。本文以建构主义分析,以及过去半个世纪以来伊朗反生育主义与生育主义主张与政策的相互作用为基础,强调人口问题的影像如何在社会文化上建构,并对个人的日常生活产生实际影响,以及人们如何找到回应、抵抗与对抗计划生育、人口、生育与家庭等主流话语与政策的方法。因此,关于人口的不同主张、定义和论述,不仅是抽象的争论点,而且已经渗透到伊朗人民的情感、记忆、关系、前景和实践中。研究结果表明,人口政策和人口问题在多个层面上存在着一些现有的和新出现的辩证法、悖论和不确定性,这些定义对政策相关的科学研究(科学)、政策过程及其结果、生育前景和人们(公众)的实践都有重要的见解和影响。关键词:主张活动伊朗人口政策再生产社会建构主义感谢麦克马斯特大学的Dorothy Pawluch教授对社会建构主义的长期贡献以及在本文初稿中提出的宝贵意见。我们还要感谢Mahmoud Ghazi Tabatabaei教授(德黑兰大学)和S. M. Hani Sadati博士(社区研究中心和麦吉尔大学)对手稿早期版本的贡献。我们也要感谢Fahimeh Ahmadian-Yazdi博士对这份手稿的格式化工作。披露声明作者在本文的研究或写作中没有利益冲突。注1:Akbar Aghajanian(1991),伊朗人口变化,1966-86:一个停滞的人口转型?人口与发展评论,17(4),703-715.2 Mohammad Jalal Abbasi-Shavazi, Amir Mehryar, Gavin Jones和Peter McDonald (Citation2002)。革命、战争和现代化:伊朗的人口政策和生育率变化,《人口研究杂志》,19(1),第25-46.3页,同上。5同上6 Marie lader - fouladi (Citation2021)伊朗伊斯兰共和国的新人口政策和生育率的近期变化,伊朗研究54 (5-6),pp. 907-930.7 Farshad Farzadfar, Mohsen Naghavi和Sadaf G. Sepanlou(2022)伊朗卫生系统绩效:Nader Mehri, Mahmood Messkoub和Suzanne Kunkel (Citation2020)伊朗人口老龄化的趋势,决定因素和影响,老龄化国际,45(4),327-343.9 Goodarz Danaei等(Citation2019)转型中的伊朗,the Lancet, 393(10184), pp. 1984-2005;和Farzadfar等。Mohammad Saleh Ali- taleshi, Sadat Feiznia, Mauro Masiol (Citation2022)伊朗超大城市大气沉积约束元素的季节和空间变化:污染水平,基于pmf的来源分配和风险评估,城市气候,42,101113.12 Danaei等。13 Homayoun Sadeghi-Bazargani等人(Citation2022)。 为实现伊朗长期国家道路安全目标确定研究重点,《全球卫生杂志》(12),第14页Djavad Salehi-Isfahani (Citation2002)伊朗人口、人力资本和经济增长。见Sirageldin主编,《中东地区的人力资本与人口》。(伦敦:i.b. Tauris和开罗,开罗美国大学出版社)Hassan Joulaei, Kamran Bagheri Lankarani, Saeed Shahabi等(Citation2022),伊朗卫生保健系统腐败及其控制策略的关键分析,设拉子电子医学杂志,23(3).16《伊朗历史与政治:国家与社会的辩证法》,(伦敦:劳特利奇出版社),第17页Mir-Taher Mousavi和M. Sheiyani (Citation2015)社会资本和社会健康,(德黑兰:Aghah)(波斯语);18乔尔·贝斯特(Citation2017)《社会问题》(第三版)。(纽约:诺顿公司)《社会问题的思考:建构主义视角导论》,(佛罗里达博卡拉顿:劳特利奇出版社),第20页最佳:“社会问题。”21 Stephen Hilgartner和Charles L. Bosk (Citation1988)。Mahmood Ghazi Tabatabaei和Abouali Vedadhir (Citation2013):“好、坏和丑陋:伊朗人口问题的兴衰:社会问题研究学会(SSSP)”论文发表,纽约,纽约(8月10-12日)Homa Hoodfar和Samad Assadpour (Citation2000)伊朗伊斯兰共和国的人口政策政治,《计划生育研究》,31(1),pp. 19-34.25 Abbasi-Shavazi, et al. Revolution。26 Hoodfar and Assadpour,《政治》27 Aghajanian,《人口》,Abbasi-Shavazi,《近期》。28 Hoodfar and Assadpour,《政治》29 Abbasi-Shavazi, Mehryar Jones和McDonald, <革命>。《人口转型、机会之窗与人口红利:伊朗新人口政策的走向》(2012)。提交给瑞典斯德哥尔摩欧洲人口会议的文件(6月13日至16日)Abbasi-Shavazi等,《革命》;Amir H. Mehryar, Farzaneh Roudi, Akbar Agajanian和Farzaneh Tajdini32 Ladier-Fouladi,《伊斯兰教》。“33 Karim Mahmoodi, Ahmad Mohammadpur和Mehdi Rezaei (Citation2015)伊朗政治背景下的人口政策话语分析,质量与数量,49,pp. 1883-1895.34”Abbasi-Shavazi等。35 Meimanat Hosseini-Chavoshi, Mohammad Jalal Abbasi-Shavazi和Peter McDonald (Citation2016)伊朗的生育、婚姻和计划生育:对未来政策的影响,人口视野,13(1),pp. 31-40.36[37] Mahmoud Ghazi Tabatabaei和AbouAli Vedadhir(2013):《好、坏和丑陋:伊朗人口问题的兴衰》,论文发表于SSSP会议,纽约。39 Hosseini-Chavoshi, et al.《生育》,40伊朗有4亿人的容量,在:Entekhab(新闻代码:78127)(波斯语)。41Talha Burki (Citation2022)伊朗的人口政策:对青年的影响,《柳叶刀儿童与青少年健康》。42伊朗伊斯兰共和国政府(Citation2022)总统发布特别命令,根据最高领导人宣布的政策制定第七个发展计划。43 Serap Kavas和Arland Thornton (Citation2020)土耳其关于婚姻和生育的发展理想主义和信仰,《人口研究与政策评论》,39,第47-75.44页。45 Mahmoodi等人,《论述》,第46页伊朗的人口没有老龄化!(对米尔扎伊的采访),可在Borna News(新闻代码:1004012)(波斯语)找到Zahra Sokhtanloo和Azam Rahmatabad (Citation2013)什叶派一代的划分:人口下降的原因及其后果,《知识》(英文版)189(人口动力学特刊)页45-58(波斯语).48社论:临床医学(Citation2022)伊朗人的悲伤:为人权(妇女)权利的持续斗争。eClinicalMedicine 52:101719。
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来源期刊
Middle East Critique
Middle East Critique AREA STUDIES-
CiteScore
2.20
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6.20%
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25
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