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Chapter 9 reviews the attempt by Iranian local government to engage with the international municipal cooperation movement as a way to advance the goal of democratic local government inside Iran and highlights the geopolitical factors that pose sharp limits to that goal. For four years before Iranian security services terminated it, I was co-director of a pioneering “city diplomacy” project involving a multi-year collaboration between mayors and civil society groups from the Netherlands and Iran. The project included exchange visits between Iran and the Netherlands by city councilors, mayors, local civil society groups, and central government officials. It also included collaborative funded neighborhood projects inside Iran. The chapter traces the reasons for the failure of the city diplomacy project to geopolitical factors rooted in Iran’s rejectionist foreign policy and anti-Western and anti-liberal ideology. The international geopolitical factors compounded the antidemocratic ideological commitments of the regime that defeated domestic attempts at reform. Despite its abrupt curtailment, the four-year project made some valuable contributions to the discourse/project/ideal of local democracy in Iran, although its impact on the practice of local democracy is not clear. On the other hand, the Iranian state resolutely moved into the space of international municipal cooperation work in a way that negates and neutralizes democratization and imposed its own terms of Islamization on the interchange with the international community around the theme of urbanization and cities. This shows that the Iranian regime is extremely skilled at managing risk rather than eliminating it.
Empirically rich and theoretically informed, this book is an innovative analysis of political decentralization under the Islamic Republic of Iran. Drawing upon Kian Tajbakhsh's twenty years of experience working with and researching local government in Iran, it uses original data and insights to explain how local government operates in towns and cities as a form of electoral authoritarianism. With a combination of historical, political, and financial field research, it explores the multifaceted dimensions of local power and how various ideologically opposed actors shaped local government as an integral component of authoritarian state building. Ultimately, this book demonstrates how local government serves to undermine democratization and consolidate the Islamist regime. As Iran's cities and towns grow and develop, their significance will only increase, and this study is vital to understanding their politics, administration and influence.
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