Haleh Esfandiari
Distinguished Fellow; Director Emerita, Middle East ProgramÂ
202/691-4259
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Dr. Haleh Esfandiari, the former and founding Director of the Middle East Program at the Woodrow ĐÇżŐ´ŤĂ˝ International Center for Scholars, is a Public Policy Fellow at the ĐÇżŐ´ŤĂ˝ Center. She has had a rich and varied career. In her native Iran, she was a journalist, served as deputy secretary general of the Women's Organization of Iran, and was the deputy director of a cultural foundation where she was responsible for the activities of several museums and art and cultural centers. She taught Persian language at Oxford University and, prior to coming to the ĐÇżŐ´ŤĂ˝ Center, from 1980 to 1994, she taught Persian language, contemporary Persian literature, and courses on the women's movement in Iran at Princeton University. Dr. Esfandiari was a fellow at the Woodrow ĐÇżŐ´ŤĂ˝ International Center for Scholars from 1995 to 1996.
Haleh Esfandiari is the author of My Prison, My Home: One Woman's Story of Captivity in Iran (September 2009), Reconstructed Lives: Women and Iran's Islamic Revolution (1997), editor of Iranian Women: Past, Present and Future (1977), co-author of Best Practices: Progressive Family Laws in Muslim Countries, the co-editor of The Economic Dimensions of Middle Eastern History (1990) and also of the of the multi-volume memoirs of the famed Iranian scholar, Ghassem Ghani.
Her articles have appeared in essay collections in a number of books as well as in Foreign Policy, Journal of Democracy, Princeton Papers in Near Eastern Studies, New Republic, ĐÇżŐ´ŤĂ˝ Quarterly, Chronicle of Higher Education and Middle East Review. Her Op-Ed pieces include âHeld in My Homelandâ (September 2007), âTehran's Self-Fulfilling Paranoiaâ (August 2009), and âMy âRosewaterâ: 105 dark days in an Iranian prisonâ (November 2014) in the Washington Post and "US Hikers and Iran's Maze" (October 2010) in the Los Angeles Times. She has also written for blogs and websites such as the New York Review of Books Blog with âIranâs Harshest Sentence for an Innocent Scholarâ (October 2009), âIranâs Women of Warâ (January 2010), âIranâs Interrupted Livesâ (September 2010), âIranâs State of Fearâ (March 2011), âIn the Jaws of the Mullahsâ (November 2011), and âIranâs Man in the Middleâ (June 2013), as well as âWhy Iran Freed Roxana Saberiâ (May 2009) in the Daily Beast, âMisreading Tehran: The Real Impact of the Electionsâ (June 2010) in Foreign Policy, âIran: The State of Fearâ (April 2011) in the New York Review of Books, âThe End of Illusionâ in the blog of the New Republic (October 2011), âUnderstanding Iranâs Internal Divisionsâ (August 2014), âISISâs Cruelty Toward Women Gets Scant Attentionâ (September 2014), âInterpreting Iranâs Mixed Messagesâ (September 2014), âISIS Says the Quran Allows Enslaving Women. Will Clerical Leaders Respond?â (October 2014), âWhatâs Behind the Hostility Toward Women in Iranâ (October 2014), âHow Iran Jails Journalists and Human Rights Lawyersâ (November 2014), âIranâs Nuclear Politics and Missed Opportunitiesâ (November 2014), âWhy the Media Should Not Forget Iranâs Detention of Jason Rezaianâ (December 2014), âIranâs Rouhani Pushes Backâ (December 2014), âUS-Iran Normalization? Donât Hold Your Breathâ (December 2014), âHow Will Women in the Middle East Fare in 2015?â (January 2015), âCondemning Terrorism is Just a First Step for Muslim Statesâ (January 2015), âThe Significance of Hard-Linersâ Criticism of Iranian Foreign Minister Zarifâ (February 2015), âFrom Khamenei, Conditions for a Deal on Iranâs Nuclear Programâ (February 2015), âHave the Iran Nuclear Talks Reached an Impasse?â (February 2015), âIn Bahrain, Arab Spring Hopes Are Freezing Overâ (February 2015), âIn Iran, a Range of Reactions to Netanyahuâs Speech and Nuclear Talksâ (March 2015), âIn Muslim Menâs Protests, Support for Womenâs Choice About Veilingâ (March 2015), âWill Museum Terrorist Attack Derail Tunisiaâs Transition to Democracy?â (March 2015), âA Nuclear Deal Wonât Bridge the Divide Between Iran and the USâ (March 2015), âAs Iranians Welcome Nuclear Deal, Khameneiâs Reaction Is Keyâ (April 2015), âWhat Will, and Wonât, Help Free Jason Rezaian From Prison in Iranâ (April 2015), âIran Hard-Linersâ Newest Obsession: Cohabitationâ (April 2015), and âA Warning in Iranâs Closed-Door Trial of Reporter Jason Rezaianâ (May 2015) in blog of the Wall Street Journal, âIran Curtails Female Educationâ in The Iran Primer blog (August 2012), âBreaking Taboosâ in the ĐÇżŐ´ŤĂ˝ Centerâs Middle East Programâs Viewpoints series (November 2013), as well as pieces for the New York Timesâ âRoom for Debateâ series (August 2013, March 2014, and August 2014). Dr. Esfandiari wrote the foreword to the monograph Iranâs Nuclear Chess: Calculating Americaâs Next Moves (July 2014) by Robert S. Litwak.
Haleh Esfandiari is the first recipient of a yearly award established in her name, the Haleh Esfandiari Award; this award was presented to her by a group of businesswomen and activists from countries across the Middle East and North Africa region on the occasion of a conference sponsored by the ĐÇżŐ´ŤĂ˝ Center â Women Entrepreneurs: Business and Legal Reform in the MENA Region â held in Amman, Jordan in May 2008. Her other awards include: a John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation grant (1997); the Special American Red Cross Award (2008); the Women's Equality Award from the National Council of Women's Organizations (2008); and Miss Hallâs School Woman of Distinction Award (2009). In December 2008, she became one of three first annual recipients of the Project on Middle East Democracyâs âLeader for Democracyâ award.
Dr. Esfandiari received her PhD. from the University of Vienna. She is a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. Dr. Esfandiari serves on the Board of the Peace Research Endowment and on the board of advisors for the Project on Middle East Democracy. She was featured in Parade magazine (May 2008), in O, the Oprah Winfrey magazine (November 2008), and in Vogue magazine (August 2009).
Her memoir, My Prison, My Home, based on Esfandiariâs arrest by the Iranian security authorities in 2007, after which she spent 105 days in solitary confinement in Tehranâs Evin Prison, was published in September 2009 by Ecco Press, an imprint of Harper Collins. The paperback edition was released in October 2010.
Education
PhD., University of Vienna
Honors
Recipient of a MacArthur Foundation Grant
Honorary degree from Georgetown University Law Center (2008)
Insight & Analysis by Haleh Esfandiari
Filter
- Blog post
- Women & Gender
Woman, Life, Freedom: The Second Anniversary
- Blog post
- Women & Gender
The Token Women in President Pezeshkianâs Cabinet
- Article
- International Security
Haleh Esfandiari on Iranâs New Cabinet: A Mixed Bag
- Article
- Elections
Iranâs Surprising Election: Pezeshkian Beats the Odds
- Article
- Elections
Iranâs New Interim President
- Blog post
- Women & Gender
Iranâs Obsession with its Rebellious Youth
- Article
- Elections
Another Engineered Election in Iran
- Article
- Historical Memory
Iranian Women: From Enthusiasm to Rebellion