The Security-Development Nexus and the Jina Mahsa Amini Protests in Iran's Border Provinces

Iranian Studies Pub Date : 2024-02-28 DOI:10.1017/irn.2024.3
Eric Lob
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Abstract

Even before the 1979 Iranian Revolution, Iran's border provinces, which contain Arabs, Azeri Turks, Baluch, Kurds, and Turkmen, were marginalized and securitized by the state. These processes and outcomes have created a vicious cycle and self-fulfilling prophecy within the context of the so-called security-development nexus. Iran's peripheral provinces border Iraq and Turkey in the west and Afghanistan and Pakistan in the east. They are located far from Tehran in the inaccessible and inhospitable terrain and climate of mountains and deserts. This geography and topography partially explain why these provinces have been traditionally neglected by the state. Beyond the geographic remoteness and topographic inaccessibility of these provinces, their ethno-religious demographics and marginalization-based grievances, including those that existed during the shah's industrial and urban-focused development drive before the revolution, have fostered local opposition to the state. Most recently, between 2022 and 2023, this opposition has culminated in the Jina Mahsa Amini or Woman, Life, Freedom protests.
安全与发展的关系和伊朗边境省份的吉娜-马赫萨-阿米尼抗议活动
甚至在 1979 年伊朗革命之前,包含阿拉伯人、阿泽里土耳其人、俾路支人、库尔德人和土库曼人的伊朗边境省份就已被国家边缘化和安全化。这些过程和结果在所谓的安全-发展关系中造成了恶性循环和自我实现的预言。伊朗周边省份西邻伊拉克和土耳其,东接阿富汗和巴基斯坦。这些省份远离德黑兰,地处山区和沙漠,交通不便,气候恶劣。这种地理和地形在一定程度上解释了为什么这些省份历来受到国家的忽视。除了地理位置偏远和地形不便之外,这些省份的民族宗教人口构成和边缘化带来的不满情绪,包括革命前沙赫以工业和城市为重点的发展过程中存在的不满情绪,也助长了当地对国家的反对。最近,即 2022 至 2023 年间,这种反对情绪在 "Jina Mahsa Amini "或 "妇女、生命、自由 "抗议活动中达到高潮。
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