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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Iran Revolution: c. 1980, March 22, 2006
By 
William Garrison Jr. (Bellevue, WA United States) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Revolutionary Iran: Civil Society and State in the Modernization Process (Hardcover)
"Revolutionary Iran: Civil State and State in the Modernization Process", by: Masoud Kamali ISBN: 1-84014-449-1; Ashgate Publisher. Revolutionary Iran investigates two major political transformations in the modern history of Iran: the Constitutional Revolution of 1905-09 and the Islamic Revolution of 1976-79, and their relation to the modernization of Iran in this century. It addresses a core question: Why did the clergy not take political power in the Constitutional Revolution when Iran was a traditional society and they played a key leadership role in the revolution? Yet they succeeded in the more modern Iran of 1979. Characterization of socio-economic relationships between the two major influential groups of civil society in Iran and their role in political transformations is considered central for answering such a question. The book deals with revolution in terms of relationships between civil society and state; which, it is argued, are central to analyzing and understanding modern movements in Iran and other Islamic countries. The major contribution of the book can be summarized as follows: It identifies a socio-political division of power and influence between state and civil society during a long period of Iran's Islamic history as the key theoretical basis for understanding modern transformations of Iranian society. Such a division has, so far, been largely ignored. It explores the clergy and bazaris as the social basis of civil society in Iran and challenges Gellner's viewpoint that an Islamic civil society is an impossibility. It argues that the modernization of religion and the creation of modern political theories by the clergy were both crucial means for defeating a modern authoritarian state and seizing political power. It identifies the main social group without whom the Islamic Revolution of Iran would not have achieved political victory, i.e., the dispossessed. It presents a theoretical basis for analyzing and understanding new Islamic movements in the Islamic world. Contents: Introduction; Civil Society in Iran, Foreign Impact and the Constitutional Revolution: The construction of the Muslim society of Iran; Civil society in Iran; Iran on the eve of the constitutional revolution; The constitutional revolution; The constitutionalism of the Ulama. The New Monarchical Regime, Modernization and the Islamic Revolution: Iran under the Pahlavis; Modernization and the Ulama; Iran on the eve of the Islamic revolution; The Islamic revolution. Discussion and Conclusions: The two revolutions: comparative reflections; Conceptual reflections: Islamic civil society, modernization, revolution.
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Revolutionary Iran: Civil Society and State in the Modernization Process
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