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Iran Begins Limits On Female Education

With the start of the new Iranian academic year, a raft of restrictions on courses open to female students has been introduced, raising questions about the rights of women to education in Iran - and the long-term impact such exclusions might have.

More than 30 universities have introduced new rules banning female students from almost 80 different degree courses.

These include a bewildering variety of subjects from engineering, nuclear physics and computer science, to English literature, archaeology and business.

No official reason has been given for the move, but campaigners, including Nobel Prize winning lawyer Shirin Ebadi, allege it is part of a deliberate policy by the authorities to exclude women from education.

"The Iranian government is using various initiatives… to restrict women's access to education, to stop them being active in society, and to return them to the home," she told the BBC.

Higher Education Minister Kamran Daneshjoo has sought to play down the situation, stressing Iran's strong track record in getting young people into higher education and saying that despite the changes, 90% of university courses are still open to both men and women.

Men outnumbered

Iran was one of the first countries in the Middle East to allow women to study at university and since the Islamic Revolution in 1979 it has made big efforts to encourage more girls to enrol in higher education.

The gap between the numbers of male and female students has gradually narrowed. In 2001 women outnumbered men for the first time and they now make up more than 60% of the overall student body.

Year-on-year more Iranian women than men are applying for university places, motivated some say by the chance to live a more independent life, to have a career and to escape the pressure from parents to stay at home and to get married.

Women are well-represented across a wide range of professions and there are many female engineers, scientists and doctors.

But many in Iran fear that the new restrictions could now undermine this achievement.

"I wanted to study architecture and civil engineering," says Leila, a young woman from the south of Iran. "But access for girls has been cut by fifty per cent, and there's a chance I won't get into university at all this year."

In the early days after the Islamic revolution, universities were one of the few places where young Iranian men and women could mix relatively freely.

Over the years this gradually changed, with universities introducing stricter measures like separate entrances, lecture halls and even canteens for men and women.

Since the unrest after the 2009 presidential election this process has accelerated as conservative politicians have tightened their grip on the country.

Women played a key role in those protests - from the traditionally veiled but surprisingly outspoken wives of the two main opposition candidates, to the glamorous green-scarved demonstrators out on the streets of Tehran and other cities.

Some Iranians say it was the sight of so many young Iranian women at the forefront of the protests in 2009 that unnerved the country's conservative leaders and prompted them into action.

"The women's movement has been challenging Iran's male-dominated establishment for several years," says Saeed Moidfar, a retired sociology professor from Tehran.

"Traditional politicians now see educated and powerful women as a threat."


'Islamisation'

In a speech after the 2009 protests, the country's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei called for the "Islamisation" of universities and criticised subjects like sociology, which he said were too western-influenced and had no place in the Iranian Islamic curriculum.

Since then, there have been many changes at universities, with courses cut and long-serving academic staff replaced with conservative loyalists.

Many see the new restrictions on female students as a continuation of this process.

In August 2012 Ayatollah Khamenei made another widely-discussed speech calling for Iranians to return to traditional values and to have more children.

It was an affront to many in a country which pioneered family planning and has won praise from around the world for its emphasis on the importance of providing families with access to contraception.

"People are more educated now and they are more concerned about the size of their families," says Saeed Moidfar. "I doubt that the government plans will change anything."

However, since the speech there have been reports of cutbacks in family planning programmes, and in sex education classes at universities.

It is not yet clear exactly how many women students have been affected by the new rules on university entrance. But as the new academic year begins, at least some have had to completely rethink their career plans.

"From the age of 16 I knew I wanted to be a mechanical engineer, and I really worked hard for it," says Noushin from Esfahan. "But although I got high marks in the National University entrance exam, I've ended up with a place to study art and design instead."

Over the coming months campaigners will be watching closely to track the effects of the policy and to try to gauge the longer-term implications.



http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-middle-east-19665615


Added: Sep-22-2012 Occurred On: Sep-22-2012
By: drynwhyl
In:
Iran
Tags: iran, middle, east, education, islam, women, university, misogyny, inequality, exclusion
Location: Iran (load item map)
Marked as: approved
Views: 1142 | Comments: 26 | Votes: 3 | Favorites: 0 | Shared: 0 | Updates: 0 | Times used in channels: 1
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  • Back to the dark ages. Just wait until they run out of oil... Boy-oh-boy will that be funny to watch!

    Posted Sep-22-2012 By 

    (3)

    • @EmrysM
      Well, that may be sooner than later, as it is Saudi Arabia said something similar and thats why so much building is going on so fast in some places in the mid east - think Dubai with the tallest building and all the reclaimed land, thing is, once the money runs out then what do you do to run the place?, tourism?, they`ll probably be charging 20 bucks to go watch the local beheadings, just like a person who buys a REAL expensive car, blown all the cash on the car, now how about insuranc More..

      Posted Sep-23-2012 By 

      (2)

    • @Blackwolfhunting Funny thing is I just had buddy from Japan stay here for a few weeks, dude went from Dubai to Britain to U.S., he left here to Canada continuing his tour of the world, but I put one of his roller-cases into my brother's trunk, you could fit a couple bodies in it with room to spare, it weighed over 100lb with whatever he had in it and he said it only cost him $20 USD in Dubai. I wish I had known that or I'd have asked him to get me one and paid for it and the extra baggage fee.

      Posted Sep-23-2012 By 

      (1)

  • You get what you ask for....

    Posted Sep-22-2012 By 

    (2)

  • Iran is just like the rest of the world guys dont give them a hard time...

    Posted Sep-22-2012 By 

    (1)

  • I'm surprised that education was even offered to women in Iran since 1979. Just another example of the cult of islam being destructive towards women.

    Posted Sep-22-2012 By 

    (1)

  • Modern Islam hard at work benefiting the people as a whole,,,yep,,,good on yu.

    This is what happens when religion gets involved with every part of life, things just start to shut down..

    Posted Sep-23-2012 By 

    (1)

  • Look at that fine enlightening religion of peace and forced stupidity. Don't ya just want to join the Muji cult right this second!!! Oh Persia, what happened to ya? Is there no one left of the Persian people with any balls left?

    Posted Sep-23-2012 By 

    (1)

  • Good restrict the potential of that country from becoming more than what it is. I bet those women have more potential than those men. But their religion gets in the way.

    Posted Sep-23-2012 By 

    (1)

  • Iranian men must be quite threatened by their women...

    Posted Sep-23-2012 By 

    (1)

  • ahhh, the religion of peace, hard at it being fair and equitable to its own followers.

    Allah is a pig.

    Posted Sep-23-2012 By 

    (1)

  • well what better way to show how smart and enlightened the religion of peace is....just keep them in the kitchen and bedrooms. Hell they don't need to do arithmetic and all that thinking...after all..their job is to please their owners and cook....yep...what a culture....and they have the gall to tell us that their way is better.... we should kick out all male iranian foreign students from our universities and send them back to iran...

    Posted Sep-23-2012 By 

    (0)

  • Cavecunt women have no rights.

    Posted Sep-23-2012 By 

    (0)

  • The good thing about cycles, is that one way or another they come to an end. May Iranian women have the strength to continue surviving these dark ages.

    Posted Sep-23-2012 By 

    (0)

  • Hey! Those sammmiches ain't gonna make themselves!

    Posted Sep-22-2012 By 

    (0)

  • The Iranians keeping the women down.

    Posted Sep-22-2012 By 

    (0)

  • So in Iran lucky few young man are more likely to get handjobs in a burka swingers parties. I say good for them...

    Posted Sep-23-2012 By 

    (0)