1st Edition

Tribal Politics in Iran Rural Conflict and the New State, 1921-1941

By Stephanie Cronin Copyright 2007
    284 Pages
    by Routledge

    272 Pages 3 B/W Illustrations
    by Routledge

    Placing Iran's 'tribal problem' in its historical context, Tribal Politics in Iran provides an overall assessment on the impact of this crucial period on the character of tribe-state relations in Iran to the end of Pahlavi rule and in the Islamic Republic. It analyzes the political and socio-economic factors undermining tribal politics under the regime of Reza Shah, and examines the division which took place regarding the 'tribal problem'. The author argues that on the one hand, it lead to modern ethnic nationalism and on the other, detribalization and absorption into wider class or ideology-based organizations happened.

    Looking particularly at the land reform of the early 1960s, and the revolution of 1979, Cronin also discusses the final disappearance of the khans as a political force and the rise of a new tribal leadership loyal to and dependent upon the regime. This innovative and important work challenges conventional political and scholarly approaches to tribal politics.

    Introduction  1. Tribe and State: The "Tribal Problem" in Iran  2. The New State and the Rural Poor  3. The Destruction of the Tribal Leaderships: The Great Khans of the Bakhtiyari  4. Challenges from Within: Junior Khans, Nomads and Peasants in Bakhtiyari  5. Rural Resistance: The Tribal Uprisings of 1929  6. The Politics of Debt: The Anglo-Persian Oil Company and the Bakhtiyari Khans  7. The Politics of Terror: The Fall of Sardar Asad and the "Bakhtiyari Plot."  Conclusion: The End of Tribal Politics in Iran.  Appendix: Tribal Campaigns 1921-1941

    Biography

    Stephanie Cronin is Iran Heritage Foundation Fellow at University College, Northampton and Senior Research Associate in the History Department, SOAS, University of London. Her current work focuses on subaltern responses to modernity in Modern Iran.