Comp Gov ALL countries/concepts
single member districts vs. multimember districts
single member district - one representative per district; multimember has more than one member per district
society of militant clergy and association of militant clergy
society is conservative socially and economically statist, association is less conservative socially and have a laissez-faire approach economically
rafsanjani
President of Iran from 1989 to 1997, part of association of militant clergy, # of clerics on Majles goes down which leads to conservative purge of 1992
khatami
president from 1997-2005; well liked cleric, part of Khordad front, had many proposals/reforms that were passed by Majles but vetoed by Guardian Council
Ahmadinejad
president from 2005-2013; non-cleric, won because: he was populist (wanted to reduce gap between rich and poor), for government aid for poor, very conservative, supported by revolutionary guards, reformists had too many other candidates, bush pissed off Iran; he was known to reverse liberal reforms ("second cultural revolution")
Rouhani
president of Iran from 2013-2021, cleric and reformist, focused on reconfiguring Iran's relationship with the West for the sake of inviting foreign investments into Iran
Last Shah of Iran
puppet of british, had conflict with Mossadeq, when came back to power used SAVAK (secret police) to crush opposition
the body of statues with no sacred basis in the Iranian system is called
qanun
The expediency Council was first created by the Ayatollah Khomeini for the purpose of
refereeing disputes between the Gaurdian Council and the Majles
Under the Pahlavis, Iran was transformed into a rentier state because of its
reliance on income from oil
Unlike the Russian and Chinese Revolutions of the 20th century, Iran's Revolution of 1979 was almost completely based on
religion
1979 revlolution
revolution against shah, US had lectured shah about giving more rights, when shah leaves to go to Italy, Khomeini takes over, revolutionaries take over and military gives in
president of Iran
second highest ranking, democratically elected but vetted by guardian council; powers: heads cabinet, signs treaties, proposes budget and some laws, appoints governors; two consecutive four year terms; members directly elected (though many candidates disqualified)
ultimate legal authority in iran rests in
sharia
In Iran ultimate legal authority rests in
sharia laws
White Revolution
(1963) Last shah wanted to get opponents on his side, so he gave them land, rights, and literacy corps, which all failed
religion in iran
- Religiously unified, as it is overwhelmingly Shi'a Muslim and about 9% Sunni - Christians, Jews, and Zoroastrians are recognized religious minorities with protections that don't always pass over into reality - The Baha'i faith is legally persecuted and are denied even the most basic things
constitutional revolt
1905 - ulemma (religious leaders who aren't getting attention from monarchy), merchants, intellectuals (unhappy with authoritarian regime) forced king to agree to new demands (a new constitution) that are mostly empty promises
strait of hormuz
20% of the world's oil has to go through it. In the case of a crisis, they could sink a bunch of ships in the Strait which would disrupt the flow of oil
khatami's reforms
50-50 divorce, raise marriage age, hijab vs. chador, foreign investment up, instituting jury trials
population of Iran
70% of the population lives on 25% of the land - 85 million people
1979 Referendum
99% of citizens voted for an islamic republic with a more democratic system
Safavids
A Shi'ite Muslim dynasty that ruled in Persia from the 16th-18th centuries that had a mixed culture of the Persians, Ottomans and Arabs. Acknowledged people of the book. They converted all the muslims to Shi'ism
rentier state
A country that obtains much of its revenue from the export of oil or other natural resources.
theocracy
A government controlled by religious leaders
supreme leader
Chief spiritual and political leader of Iran; has a life tenure; chosen by assembly of experts; powers: executive (inaugurate and dismiss president), legislative (uphold and enforce laws), judicial (power over supreme council), commander in chief, controls media, pardon powers, appointment powers, can issue a fatwa
which of the following are elected to office by direct popular vote in Iran
Assembly of religious experts and the Majles
which of the following accurately compares elections in Mexico and Iran
Both have direct elections for president
qom
City south of Tehran, where religious schools are. location of many early Khomeini supporters
Second Khordad Front
Coalition of 18 reformist groups who wanted to reform the Majles to be more progressive but many were disqualified by the Guardian Council. Most of these tries have been unsuccessful
which of the following countries did not have a major internal revolution in the 20th century
Great Britain
conservative purge of 1992
Guardian council vets candidates for the majles. Once they see that the # of clerics has gone down, they start blocking the more moderate non-cleric candidates from running to increase the # back.
cultural revolution
Had to revamp the whole system (education) to make it less about the shah and more about islam, shut down all universities for three years in order to retrain teachers. Occurred at the beginning of the islamic republic (1979)
12th Imam (Shi'a)
In hiding, will return as a Messiah to bring peace and justice
Which of the following pars of countries are unitary states
Iran and China
which of the following was not part of the nuclear agreement reached between Irana nd the US and five other world powers in 2015
Iran will never be allowed to enrich uranium to the level necessary for creating a nuclear weapon
Which of the following is the best description of the political system of Iran
It is a unitary state, with few signs of real authority granted to local officials
Which of the following ethnic groups in Iran tend to be Sunni Muslims
Kurds and Arabs
oversight of majles
Legislative branch has the power to investigate what is going on in the executive branch (has oversight over president and the cabinet)
prophet of islam
Muhammad
Shiites
Muslims that believe that only direct descendants of Muhammad should become caliph, make up 90-95% of Iran; sunnis believe that the power should be given to someone in the community
ethnicities of Iran
Persian (60%), Kurds/Azeri (15%), Arab (only 1%)
accomplishments and failures of qajars
Power suffered due to imperialism and lost oil - auctioned off away parts of territory and economy. Had a bazarris revolt and constitutional revolution during their time
book of Islam
Quran
pahlavis
Reza Khan staged a coup and overthrew Qajars. This was the first non-tribal dynasty, was authoritarian and western (modernizes Iran). During WWII, Russia and Britain took over parts of Iran and forced Reza Khan to leave and let his son take over
qajars
Separation between government and religion widened. Claimed absolute authority. Generally dominated by foreign powers (nationalized oil)
Majles
The Iranian parliament; powers: pass laws (based on Qanun), pass budget, ratify treaties, impeachment (of president), public complaints, no confidence vote (of cabinet member), oversight; 290 seats, 5 of which reserved for religious minorities (combination of single member and multimember districts); very few female members; members directly elected (though many candidates disqualified)
persepolis
The capital and greatest palace-city of the Persian Empire, destroyed by Alexander the Great. Now a tourist location
Which of the following accurately compares the Chinese military to the Iranian military
The military in both countries actively participates in policymaking
economically statist
The state and the government have a role in regulating the economy (ex. income is more equally distributed, no outside investments coming in)
In which of the following areas of life are women in Iran best represented
University enrollment
cleric
a priest or religious leader, especially a Christian or Muslim one.
patron-client network
a structure in which a central officeholder, authority figure, or group provides benefits to supporters in exchange for their loyalty.
People's Mojahedin Organization of Iran (MEK)
an Iranian political-militant organization. It advocates overthrowing the leadership of the Islamic Republic of Iran and installing its own government.
In contrast to Mexico, the political history of Iran does not include
an era in which the ciuntry lost its independence to european imperialists
Achaemenid Empire
ancient persian empire - monarchy, fought wars against Alexander the Great, which made them lose their status as an empire
Political parties in both Iran and Russia tend to be organized
around prominent political leaders/ personalities
which of the following characteristics have shaped the political cultures of Russia, China, Mexico, Iran
authoritarianism
iranian judiciary
based on Sharia law (interpreted from Quran) and Qanun - secular law (Majles), have public courts (that lead up to supreme court), clerical and revolutionary courts, no judicial review
bazars revolt
business class was mad about their territories being auctioned away during the qajars
Tehran
capital of the Qajar dynasty and present-day Iran
majles factions
conservatives (majority - chairman is conservative), reformists - often don't vote, independents/undecideds, second khordad front, statists, free markteters
raisi
current president, part of death committee (5-10 k executed under a fatwa), has had many goverment positions, anti-west/us
revolutionary courts
deal with national security: drugs, spying, etc.
clerical courts
dedicated to crimes committed by clergy (who are accountable to supreme leader)
controversy over Ahmadinejad
denied the holocaust, had a conflict with the supreme leader (embezzlement scandal)
Which of the following is a political power held by both the Iranian president and British PM
devising the budget
Presidents in both Iran and Mexico are
directly elected by the people
Iran's constitution of 1979 differed from the constitution of 1909 because the 1979 one put more emphasis on
divinely inspired clerical rule
problems with judiciary
executions and death penalty (kids considered adults under the law are put to death or put in prison with adults), women are seen as half of a man, controversial punishments - stoning, amputations, flogging,
The Ayatollah Khomeini changed the meaning of Jurist's gaurdianship by
expanding it to give clergy authority over the entire Shia Community
the political party system in Iran is characterized by
factional splits
khameini as president
from 1980-1988, during cultural revolution
national front
group of intellectuals that were mad about Mossadeq
reasons for raisi's win
has had many government positions, friend of Supreme Leader
chief judge
head of judiciary (ensures it adheres to Sharia law), appoints half of guardian council, 2 5-year terms, not responsible for special clerical court
An important cultural characteristic that separates Iran from most of its near neighbors is its
identity as shiite rather than sunni
majles checks
impeachment power (of president), no confidence votes (for cabinet members), oversight
problems with Safavids
lack of money and consequences - no centralized state, no bureaucracy or military, corrupt kings, no oil, tribal leaders controlled different areas
Khomeini
leader of the 1979 Iranian Revolution and first supreme leader (1979-1989), came up with guardianship of jurisprudence (ayatollah rule until hidden imam reappears at end of world), exiled in 1963 for criticism of white revolution
Assembly of religious experts
meet twice a year to talk about performance of Supreme leader, have the power to nominate and remove supreme leader, elected by popular vote but can be vetted, 88 members with 4 year terms
shah's three pillars
military - paid well, had good equipment, bureaucracy - paid well, families like shah, patronage - people who work for bonyads
zagros and elborz
mountains in Iran
A major geographical limitation of Iran is the
much of the lang is either desert or mountains
Mossadeq
part of national front (intellectuals), popular prime minister who decided to nationalize (controlled by government) oil (shah was against it), wanted a constitutional monarchy, shah left because Mossadeq was so popular, CIA stages a coup to get rid of him
Tudeh Party
party that challenged the shah, gained most support from working class trade unions
Which of the following policymaking factions is most likely to support the government taking an active role in controlling the economy
pragmatic clerics
Radical clerics differ from pragmatic conservative clerics in their support of
state-provided welfare benefits to the poor
Qanun Law
statutory law produced by the Majles
khameini
supreme leader of iran
persian gulf and caspian sea
surround Iran, giving it easy access to trade
twelvers
the largest group within the Muslim Shi'ites, those who hold there have been twelve Imams; also called the Imamis, the 12th is hidden
Which of the following is not a feature of the Iranian political system
the president's exercise of jurist's gaurdianship
sharia law
the system of Islamic law, based on varying degrees of interpretation of the Qu'ran
opponents of Shah
tudeh (typical communist), religious (clerics), national front - mad about Mossadeq
guardian council
very conservative body who decide who can run for any elected office and can veto any decision made by Majles. 12 members - half elected by Supreme leader, half nominated by Chief Judge and approved by Majles
geography of Iran
very diverse, surrounded by two bodies of water and big players of middle east, #2 in gas and #4 in oil
people of the book
what Muslims called Christians and Jews which means that they too only believe in one god
Civil society in Iran expanded most noticeably during the time
when Muhammad Khatami was president
According to the table, which of the following is the best description of Women's participation in the Iranian Legislature
women are seriously underrepresented