E-Mail: saba.mirhosseini@uni-bielefeld.de
Phone: +49 521 106 67631
Office: Gebäude X B2-221, Locations Map
Postbox: Nr. 398 im Gebäude X - Magistrale - Ebene C2
Doctoral Project:
Unveiling Transformation: Global Dynamics and the Status of Women in Iran (1979-2001)
Since 10/2023 | Doctoral Researcher at the Research Training Group "World Politics", Bielefeld University |
10/2021-06/2023 | MA World Politics, Bielefeld University |
03/2023-09/2023 | Research Student at Collaborative Research Centre (SFB 1288: Practices of comparing) |
10/2022-02/2023 | Tutor at Master's Program of World Studies: Politics, Orders, Cultures, Bielefeld University |
2022-2023 | Organizing Member of the Student body (Fachschaft) of Master's Programm of World Studies, Bielefeld University |
2022-2023 | Member of the Organizing Team at Chance for Science: an Initiative that Provides Social Network for Refugees, Scientist, Acadmics and Students, inaugurated ba Professors Carmen Bachmann, Leipzig University |
2017-2021 | Volunteer General English, English Speaking and IELTS Teacher |
2018-2020 | Data Collector at Imam Hussein Clinic: Psychological Counseling Services Center |
10/2015-06/2019 | BA English Language and Literature, Yazd University, Yazd, Iran |
In the 1960s and 1970s, rapid population growth in developing countries raised global concerns over potential economic and social instability. Following global discussions on population control, Iran removed legal barriers and allowed the Ministry of Health to initiate its Family Planning Program in 1988, which led to significant improving women's status. This research hypothesises that women’s empowerment was the unintended side effect of the Islamic regime’s evolving foreign policy and global political stance between 1979 and 2001. The study specifically examines changes in women's status in Iran in relation to population policies during this period. The research hypothesizes that global political conflicts enabled the emergence of a less conservative stance on population policy and bodily autonomy in Iran. The Islamic regime’s shifting policies, new alliances, and growing animosity with the US in the late 1980s inadvertently led to a less anti-democratic regime. Discourse analysis of international discussions on population policy, and archival reports from the UN Commission on the Status of Women will be carried out to shed light on the impact of Iran’s foreign policy on women's rights, the Islamic regime's inconsistent gender policies, and its paradoxical and vagarious stances which have inadvertently reinforced women's status in the country.