Dr. Alireza samiee esfahani

 

 Quarterly Journal of West Asia Political Research

 With the decision of the press supervision board of the country on May 14, 2024 and under the registration number 96164, the quarterly journal, ‘West Asia Political Research’ has received a publishing license. The specialized field of the quarterly is ‘Political Science’, ‘International Relations’ and ‘Regional studies’.   

 

 

The main research field of the quarterly is as follows:

 

  • Theoretical approaches, models and practical policies regarding the government nation- state building, political system, governance and governmentality in the region of West Asia (Middle East).
  • Typology (forms, nature and function) of government, political system, polity, government and governance.
  • Pathology of the government, political system, political society, government and governance and providing appropriate solutions.
  •  Comparative study of governance models in the west asia with the other parts of the world.

  • The political economy of the government and civil society and its impact on governance and development in the West Asian Region.
  • Participation of socio- political forces and activists (including political parties and currents, political ideologies, civil institutions, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), Islamic movements, social movements, religious, ethnic, linguistic identities, etc.) in governance and public policy process.
  • The impact of various forms of socio-political resistance and opposition (such as Islamic movements, social movements, social protests-civil disobedience, riots, uprisings, revolutions, coups, etc.) on government performance, governance and policy-making.
  • Everyday politics, life politics and its impact on governance and public policy Process.
  • New information and communication technologies, virtual space, artificial intelligence, etc., their role in governance and public policy.
  • Future  studies of government-society relations and governance in the West Asian region
  • Foreign policy, geopolitical competitions and the new regional order (investigating the role of subnational, national and international actors in politics and governance in the West Asian region.

A Comparative Study of Industrial Policy-making in the First to Fifth Development Programs of the Islamic Republic of Iran

SAEED SAFI, Rajab Izadi

Abstract The study tries to compare the policy and strategy of industrial development in the first to fifth development plans of the Islamic Republic of Iran with an analytical method and by using the quantitative and qualitative data obtained from the library which have been analyzed by document analysis method. The findings of the research show that in the first development plan, vertical industrial policy and government strategy of the developmental state prevail. In the second program, minimal government strategy and commercial policies are evident, and in the third program, the dominance of monetary policies and minimal government strategy is evident. In the fourth development plan, the predominance of strategic policies and good governance strategy is observed, and finally, in the fifth plan, it is dominated by horizontal industrial policies and good governance strategy. In the review of the executive record of development programs, the first development program has been the most successful program in the field of industrial development, with an annual average of 44.1% for the industry share index in national income growth and an annual average of 14.5% industry share in the GDP.

Resistance by Other Means; Realpolitik and the Post-2023 Geopolitical Landscape

Ali R Abootalebi

Abstract This article explores the evolving dynamics of power politics in the Middle East in the aftermath of the 2023–2025 regional upheavals, including the collapse of the Assad regime, the weakening of Iran’s regional non-state allied partners, and the increasing normalization of Israel among Arab states. Grounded in a realist framework, the paper examines Iran’s recalibration of foreign policy, the strategic fragmentation of the Palestinian movement, and the future of resistance politics in an age of shifting alliances and proxy fatigue. Arguing that ideological postures must adapt to geopolitical realities, the paper evaluates emerging models for conflict resolution and reconsiders the role of Iran as both an ideological and strategic actor. The study concludes that sustainable resistance in the post-2023 landscape must combine realism with principled sovereignty, moving beyond military confrontation toward inclusive regional diplomacy.

Typology of Governance Styles and Public Policy in Women's Empowerment in West Asia

Hossein امام وردی, Ghorban Jafarzadeh

Abstract Governance, as the foundational framework shaping public policy, plays a crucial role in determining the development trajectory, resource distribution, and the improvement of citizens' quality of life. Given this context, the central question of the article is how different governance styles interact with public policy and what impact they have on governance quality, particularly in terms of women's empowerment. The hypothesis is based on the premise that the realization of good governance requires the integration of policy dimensions, along with the enhancement of transparency, participation, and accountability. Without these elements, women's empowerment and the advancement of vulnerable groups cannot be achieved. From a theoretical perspective, the article presents a typology of governance styles based on hierarchies, markets, and networks, demonstrating that institutional reforms can only be sustainable when analyzed within the framework of political conflict, path dependency, and the specific institutional conditions of each country. From an empirical standpoint, with a focus on Western Asian countries—especially Iran, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia—the article shows that policies such as decentralization, e-government, and the promotion of women's representation have improved governance quality, but challenges remain in the areas of women's political participation and the removal of structural discrimination. The findings indicate that good governance and women's empowerment are two interconnected components that, when mutually reinforced, will lay the groundwork for sustainable development in the Western Asia region. Methodologically, the article adopts a mixed approach, with an exploratory-analytical perspective in terms of its objectives. Data collection and analysis are based on library and documentary sources.

Violation of the Peremptory Norm of the Right to Self-Determination of the People of Gaza and the Attribution of International Responsibility to the Israeli Regime after 7 October 2023

reza dehbanipoor, hoda dehbanipoor

Abstract According to international law, people possess the right to self-determination, based on which they can freely determine and pursue their political status as well as their economic, social, and cultural development. The Israeli regime, in the war against Gaza that escalated and intensified from 7 October 2023, has committed extensive and systematic violations of fundamental human rights rules, some of which are considered jus cogens, including the right to self-determination of the people. This study, employing a mixed (descriptive-analytical) approach and drawing on library, online sources, and authoritative international judicial documents and precedents, aims to elucidate the right to self-determination and its dimensions, and to identify the instances of violations of the right to self-determination of the people of Gaza by the Israeli regime after 7 October 2023. It seeks to answer the question: “How can international responsibility be attributed to Israel due to the violation of the peremptory rule of the right to self-determination of the people of Gaza?” The findings indicate that, in light of the extensively documented human rights violations, and based on the provisions of conventions and international mechanisms, international responsibility can indeed be attributed to the Israeli regime for the committed international human rights crimes.

Political Parties and the Party System in Post-Saddam Iraq

Walid Hussein Mohammad, jamshid Kholghi

Abstract  


Following the fall of Saddam Hussein’s regime in 2003, Iraq embarked on a transition toward democracy. During this period, political parties have played a central role in the country’s democratic transition. After Saddam’s downfall, numerous political parties emerged on the Iraqi political scene. Nevertheless, the main and most influential parties in Iraq can be broadly classified into three categories: Islamic parties, secular parties, and ethnic and nationalist parties. Examining political parties and the structure of the party system in Iraq after the fall of Saddam can contribute to a better understanding of the strengths and weaknesses of democracy in Iraq, the path the country has followed to date, and its future trajectory. This study seeks to examine and analyze the history of political party activity in the period prior to Saddam’s fall, as well as the role and position of various political parties in the post-Saddam era. It also analyzes the challenges facing political parties in Iraq. The main research question is: What has been the condition of political parties and the party system in post-Saddam Iraq? The research hypothesis holds that political parties in Iraq after Saddam emerged as a result of the country’s social cleavages and conflicts and have constituted the main pillar of democracy in Iraq. However, political parties and the Iraqi party system have faced serious challenges, and unless these challenges are addressed, democracy in Iraq will not be able to reach the stage of consolidation. The research adopts a qualitative methodology based on causal explanation, and data are collected through library research and online sources.


Explaining the Causes of the Taliban Government Revival in Afghanistan and its Consequences for the Islamic Republic of Iran

Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available Online from 07 December 2024

نیلوفر شفیعی ینگابادی

Abstract The Taliban militia forces, with a number of less than seventy-five thousand people, overcame the three hundred thousand-strong Afghan army in eleven days. The people of Afghanistan also experienced the rule of this extremist Islamist group at 1996 to 2001, until the Taliban government fell following the September 11 incident and the US attack on Afghanistan, and the US sought to establish a nation-state in this country. After more than twenty years, the US government decided to withdraw its forces from Afghanistan. With the beginning of the withdrawal of American forces, the Taliban militias succeeded in forming the second Islamic Emirate in this country in the shortest possible time in 2021. The rapid victory of the Taliban raised questions, the most important of which are: First, were these developments a scenario and project designed by the US? Second, what was the reason for the Taliban's rapid victory in Afghanistan and how will their government in the new era be fundamentally different from their government in the previous era? Third, what consequences could the Taliban's re-dominance in Afghanistan have for the Islamic Republic of Iran? Therefore, the purpose of writing this article is to state the reasons for the Taliban's re-emergence in Afghanistan and explain its consequences in the region, especially for the Islamic Republic of Iran, in a descriptive-analytical manner and using library tools including books, newspapers and internet resources.

The role of the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) in US foreign policy towards Syria (2017-2020)

Articles in Press, Accepted Manuscript, Available Online from 22 November 2024

Mohammad reza Beygian, Rahmat Hajimineh

Abstract The Syrian crisis is one of the most challenging security and political events in the Middle East region, and each of the actors in the international scene has adopted different approaches to the developments in Syria based on their interests. America's strategy as a global superpower is always influenced by intelligence-security organizations active in Syria. Intelligence organizations are one of the influential institutions in the policy-making and foreign policy of countries regarding regional and global developments. According to their functions, these organizations are the tools of political decision-makers to make decisions in important international developments. At the same time, they influence the process of foreign policy, but they are also strongly affected by politics. In fact, just as political variables strongly influence information, intelligence organizations also influence the foreign policy approach of countries. One of the important questions regarding intelligence organizations is their position and the way they influence the foreign policy of countries. The structure of American intelligence and security organizations has a long history, and since intelligence services usually play an overt and covert role in the foreign policy of societies, the United States of America is not exempt from this and has undoubtedly been influenced by these organizations. The executive role of these organizations in the Syrian crisis is one example of how they are used as a tool in this country's foreign 

Arab States Positions on the Gaza War (2023- 2024)): A Historical Analysis of the Decline of Arab Nationalism

Arab States' Positions on the Gaza War (2023- 2024)): A Historical Analysis of the Decline of Arab Nationalism

Volume 1, Issue 2, Winter 2025

Ali Bagheri Dolatabadi, Ayoob Damyar

Abstract The Gaza war, which began on October 7, 2023, and lasted 15 months, triggered intense global reactions due to the widespread destruction of buildings, hospitals, schools, and the killing of Palestinian civilians by the Israeli army. However, compared to the widespread protests in the West, those in Islamic countries were limited in scale and intensity, showing no signs of igniting Arab nationalism. This raises the question: what factors have contributed to the decline of Arab nationalism in the Middle East? This research hypothesizes that the decline of Arab nationalism results from complex interactions among political, social, and economic factors. A qualitative explanatory method was employed, using library-based data collection. The findings reveal that Arab nationalism has historically faced numerous challenges, including reformist and secessionist movements. Furthermore, the positions of Arab countries and recent developments during the Gaza war have weakened national identity and Arab unity. These countries perceive a new wave of nationalism based on Islamism as a threat to their authoritarian regimes and thus strive to suppress Arab nationalism in the region. Additionally, internal rivalries among Arab states, economic dependence on the West, and the inability to form effective unions are significant contributors to this decline. Consequently, Arab nationalism has gradually been replaced by local and religious tendencies, which in some cases have deepened internal divisions and further weakened Arab solidarity.

Analysis the Iran-Afghanistan relations in the Taliban government and the internal factors affecting it (2021-2024)

Analysis the Iran-Afghanistan relations in the Taliban government and the internal factors affecting it (2021-2024)

Volume 2, Issue 1, Summer 2025

ahmad kazemiarpanahi

Abstract Undoubtedly, ideology is one of the main influential elements in the foreign policy countries. The emergence and formation of the Taliban's ideology has had a major and important impact on the developments Afghanistan's foreign policy, and Iran's relations with its eastern neighbors are very important. Iran-Afghanistan relations as bilateral relations are affected many factors. The presence of countless Afghan immigrants in Iran, the issue water, drugs, and the economic and political relations these two countries have caused many and downs during different eras, which with the re-appearance of the Taliban in political power Afghanistan, can seriously damage the relations between two countries. to impress. The main problem of the research; The analysis of the effective and stable factors in Iran-Afghanistan relations in the recent period of the Taliban's rise to power. The research method in research descriptive-analytical and the method collecting data library and internet. While many analyzes point the political, military, security, historical and geopolitical factors in the future of Iran-Afghanistan relations, although complete ideological integrity was characteristic of the first period the Taliban, new period of Taliban based internal and external factors, ethnicity and ideology. has turned into two groups with different intellectual origins and has distanced itself from ideological unity. This ideological duality is an important and influential factor in Iran-Afghanistan relations in the new Taliban era.

The Role of the US Central Intelligence Organization (CIA) in US Foreign Policy Towards Syria (2017-2020)

The Role of the US Central Intelligence Organization (CIA) in US Foreign Policy Towards Syria (2017-2020)

Volume 1, Issue 1, Autumn 2024

Rahmat hajimineh, Mohammad reza Beygian

Abstract The Syrian crisis is one of the most challenging security and political events in the Middle East region, and each of the actors in the international scene has adopted different approaches to the developments in Syria based on their interests. America's strategy as a global superpower is always influenced by intelligence-security organizations active in Syria. Intelligence organizations are one of the influential institutions in the policy-making and foreign policy of countries regarding regional and global developments. According to their functions, these organizations are the tools of political decision-makers to make decisions in important international developments. At the same time, they influence the process of foreign policy, but they are also strongly affected by politics. In fact, just as political variables strongly influence information, intelligence organizations also influence the foreign policy approach of countries. One of the important questions regarding intelligence organizations is their position and the way they influence the foreign policy of countries. The structure of American intelligence and security organizations has a long history, and since intelligence services usually play an overt and covert role in the foreign policy of societies, the United States of America is not exempt from this and has undoubtedly been influenced by these organizations. The executive role of these organizations in the Syrian crisis is one example of how they are used as a tool in this country's foreign policy towards Syria. In this research, the researchers intend to examine the role of American intelligence agencies in the foreign policy of the country during Trump's presidency towards Syria. The focus of this research is the influence of the American intelligence community on the foreign policy of the country towards Syria, specifically the role of the US Central Intelligence Organization (CIA) in US foreign policy towards Syria from 2017 to 2020.

Politics of West Asia or Politics in West Asia

Politics of West Asia or Politics in West Asia

Volume 1, Issue 1, Autumn 2024

Ali R Abootalebi

Abstract Do human communities behave similarly everywhere, driven by the intricacies of politics? What constitutes politics, and is the study of politics the same everywhere, including in the West Asia region? Conversely, are politics in West Asia shaped by different authenticities, reflecting the region’s cultural, ethno-religious, linguistic, historical, and modern realities and experiences? This paper postulates that politics in West Asia resembles politics elsewhere, as politics involves individual and group decision-making over resources and their distribution for the betterment of material gain, human security, and happy, virtuous life. At the same time, studying the region’s characteristics helps to understand the parameters of human relations in the political discourses, processes, and outcomes, including the distribution of socioeconomic resources and political power.

Studying the Impact of Modernity and Islamic Attitude on the Worldview and Socio-Cultural Conditions of Contemporary Muslims

Studying the Impact of Modernity and Islamic Attitude on the Worldview and Socio-Cultural Conditions of Contemporary Muslims

Volume 2, Issue 1, Summer 2025

ali hoseini, Reza Eltyamineya, sosan ghasemi heidari

Abstract Modernity, with its distinctive features, postmodernism with its corrective stance, and religion with its normative and behavioral framework, represent three competing spheres of order—Westphalian, postmodern, and Islamic—that continue to shape contemporary thought. Each seeks to impose its own cultural and political system on human society. While modernity, through its innovations and new intellectual paradigms, is not inherently incompatible with Islam, it nonetheless calls for an Islamic approach capable of generating dynamic mechanisms to meet the needs of Muslims and to foster more resilient and inclusive modes of thought. Such an approach can enhance the scope for free action and independent reasoning among Muslims. This study aims to explore the modern world and its philosophical underpinnings, as well as their implications for the lives of Muslims and the peoples of the East. The findings suggest that the encounter of contemporary Islamic societies with Western civilization has produced numerous setbacks and challenges. Intellectual dilemmas, alongside economic, cultural, and social disruptions, largely stem from the foundational principles of modernity, including anthropocentrism, reductionism, identity erosion, nihilism, consumerism, secularism, environmental degradation, and Westernization. These influences are evident in the social, political, and ethical dimensions of both individual and collective Muslim life. Employing a descriptive-analytical method, this research seeks to provide balanced and pragmatic strategies for addressing these challenges.

Analysis of Iran’s Foreign Policy-making towards Western Countries’ Positions in the Developments of Post-Assad Syria

Analysis of Iran’s Foreign Policy-making towards Western Countries’ Positions in the Developments of Post-Assad Syria

Volume 2, Issue 1, Summer 2025

Mohammad Mahdenoor

Abstract  
 
The public policy of the Islamic Republic of Iran in the field of foreign policy, especially in the West Asian region, has always been influenced by geopolitical, security, and ideological considerations. One of the most important areas of this policymaking is the developments in Syria and its position in regional equations. The Syrian crisis and the collapse of Bashar al-Assad’s government have had far-reaching consequences for Iran’s security and regional influence, and the reaction of Western countries has also added to the complexity of these conditions. This article, focusing on the “balance of interests” approach, examines Iran’s strategies in dealing with these developments. The research findings show that Iran, by utilizing tools such as soft balancing, regional coalition building and support for proxy forces, multi-level and multilateral diplomacy, limited military measures aimed at deterrence, media diplomacy and rational representation in global public opinion, has tried to maintain its position in the axis of resistance and regional equations while reducing security threats from Western powers. Iran's approach focuses on the use of low-cost and flexible tools rather than relying on hardware balancing and direct military spending. Accordingly, Iran's foreign policy towards Western countries in the process of developments in Syria has been redefined based on maintaining national security and consolidating regional influence through multi-faceted and low-cost strategies.
 
 

A Study of Political and Military Developments of the Resistance Axis before and After the Martyrdom of General Soleimani

A Study of Political and Military Developments of the Resistance Axis before and After the Martyrdom of General Soleimani

Volume 1, Issue 1, Autumn 2024

ali aghaei meibodi, mohsen shafiee seifabadi, nejat mohammadifar

Abstract The main question of this study is: “What developments has the Resistance Axis experienced in political and military fields before and after the martyrdom of General Qassem Soleimani?” After evaluating the socio-political texts and available sources in this field, the results of the research showed that during the 22-year period of Martyr Soleimani's command of the Quds Force, resistance groups in the Middle East region have grown day by day, so that today, in addition to Lebanon and Palestine, these groups have also been established in Syria, Iraq, and Yemen. Even the Yemeni Ansar Allah formed a government in Sanaa. In Palestine, the new generation of resistance has expanded into the occupied territories, and in current Iraq, numerous groups are demanding the expulsion of American soldiers from this country, so the sum of these developments has strengthened and deepened the “Geopolitics of Resistance” in the region. Another important point that is understandable after the martyrdom of General Soleimani is the “network” nature of these groups. For example, Hezbollah of Lebanon played a constructive role in the Syrian crisis and the war against terrorists. In addition, Hezbollah in the recent war in Gaza on the northern front and the Yemenis also responded practically to defend Gaza by launching missile attacks on the ships of the Zionist regime. This fact is also true for the Iraqi resistance groups. Another important point before and after the martyrdom of General Soleimani is the “people-based” nature of the resistance groups. In other words, the popularity of the resistance axis is the main sources of power of these actors. In fact, General Soleimani, with his managerial and commanding qualities, had a unique ability to organizing local and indigenous forces.

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