This article considers the association between religion, family formation and social trends in Iran from a socio-demographic perspective. Iran has experienced one of the most spectacular falls in birth rate ever experienced in human history. The fundamental socio-cultural changes over the past few decades have made it a unique 'social laboratory' for the analysis of determinants of changes in marriage and fertility patterns. While emphasising the distinctiveness of the country case study, the article also provides evidence relating to the long-standing debate as to whether religion or factors other than religion explain such characteristics as early marriage, high incidence of marriage and high fertility in so-called Islamic contexts
Introduction of Islam to Iran changed the political and social structures, as well as part of the so...
Using data on 4,667 women from the 1976-77 Iran Fertility Survey, we examine the trend and social co...
Young people are regarded as agents of socio-cultural change as well as being subject to structural ...
This article considers the association between religion, family formation and social trends in Iran ...
This paper provides research-based evidence to examine the association between family formation, rep...
International stereotypes tend to portray Iran as a ‘traditional’ society resistant to many aspects ...
The Islamic Republic of Iran has experienced a phenomenal fertility decline in recent years. The Tot...
Abstract Iran as a developing country (in terms of age and development level), has experienced rapid...
Mohammad Jalal Abbasi-Shavazi argues that international stereotypes tend to portray Iran as a \u27tr...
Confounding all conventional wisdom, the fertility rate in the Islamic Republic of Iran fell from ar...
The mean age at marriage of Iranian women increased by three years between the mid-1980s and 2000 du...
The total fertility rate in Iran decreased from 6.5 to 2.1 children per woman between 1982 and 2000,...
Although it is widely recognized that demographic transition is not an uninterrupted process, demogr...
At the turn of the twenty-first century, the Islamic Republic of Iran reached below-replacement leve...
Iran has experienced remarkable demographic changes over the last three decades. After a major polit...
Introduction of Islam to Iran changed the political and social structures, as well as part of the so...
Using data on 4,667 women from the 1976-77 Iran Fertility Survey, we examine the trend and social co...
Young people are regarded as agents of socio-cultural change as well as being subject to structural ...
This article considers the association between religion, family formation and social trends in Iran ...
This paper provides research-based evidence to examine the association between family formation, rep...
International stereotypes tend to portray Iran as a ‘traditional’ society resistant to many aspects ...
The Islamic Republic of Iran has experienced a phenomenal fertility decline in recent years. The Tot...
Abstract Iran as a developing country (in terms of age and development level), has experienced rapid...
Mohammad Jalal Abbasi-Shavazi argues that international stereotypes tend to portray Iran as a \u27tr...
Confounding all conventional wisdom, the fertility rate in the Islamic Republic of Iran fell from ar...
The mean age at marriage of Iranian women increased by three years between the mid-1980s and 2000 du...
The total fertility rate in Iran decreased from 6.5 to 2.1 children per woman between 1982 and 2000,...
Although it is widely recognized that demographic transition is not an uninterrupted process, demogr...
At the turn of the twenty-first century, the Islamic Republic of Iran reached below-replacement leve...
Iran has experienced remarkable demographic changes over the last three decades. After a major polit...
Introduction of Islam to Iran changed the political and social structures, as well as part of the so...
Using data on 4,667 women from the 1976-77 Iran Fertility Survey, we examine the trend and social co...
Young people are regarded as agents of socio-cultural change as well as being subject to structural ...