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Ardeshir Geravand: The State Is the Greatest Obstacle to Social Organization/ Ali Kalaei
In today’s Iran, inequality is no longer limited to income gaps or lifestyle differences; rather, this inequality and class divide have taken on new dimensions and adopted new practices. The question now is: how have these divides emerged, and where are they leading Iranian society? Are we still facing traditional patterns of inequality, or are […]...
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Admin
From Bread to Justice/ Mina Javani
Food insecurity in Iran is no longer merely a subsistence issue; it is a symptom of deeper fractures in the country’s economic, environmental, and institutional structures. In a world where food production has never been so technologically widespread, the persistence of hunger and malnutrition across societies points above all to inequality in resource distribution and […]...
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Mina Javani
Hassan Sadeghi: The Government Is Social Security’s Biggest Debtor/ Pedram Tahassoni
In recent years, as the shadow of crisis has grown heavier over the country’s pension systems, conversations with those who have spent their lives working in this field have become all the more vital. The social security system, as one of the main pillars of social justice and economic sustainability, reflects—both in Iran and elsewhere—the […]...
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Created By:
Padram Tahsini
Mehdi Pazouki: The Business Operations of Pension Funds Are the Greatest Managerial Mistake/ Ali Kalaei
While signs of bankruptcy among Iran’s pension funds are appearing one after another, and their financial burden increasingly weighs on the national budget each year, the need to discuss the causes and consequences of this situation is more urgent than ever. Peace Mark Monthly Magazine, in this regard, conducted a candid interview with Dr. Mehdi […]...
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Created By:
Ali Kalaei
Pension Funds in the Strait of Trust and Obligation/ Amir Javaheri Langroudi
In recent years, the condition of pension funds—especially the Cultural Workers Reserve Fund and the performance of the Social Security Organization—has attracted the attention of many researchers, social activists, and fund members. The importance of this issue is evident not only in theory but also in practice, as its crisis-inducing consequences directly and significantly impact […]...
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Amir Javaheri Langaroudi
The Bankruptcy of Pension Funds and Wage Arrears/ Sina Yousefi
In recent decades, the country’s pension funds—especially the Civil Servants Pension Fund, the Social Security Organization, and the Armed Forces Pension Fund—have faced a deep structural crisis. This crisis stems from chronic imbalance between resources and expenditures, unprofessional policymaking, and weak corporate governance in managing these institutions. The share of public budget contributions to cover […]...
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Sina Yousefi
The Pension Crisis in Iran Through a Global Lens/ Ahmad Alavi
Pension funds, as the cornerstones of social security systems, play a key role in ensuring economic security, reducing poverty, and strengthening social cohesion. However, inefficiencies in these funds can lead to economic instability, increased inequality, and erosion of public trust. In Iran, pension funds such as the Civil Servants Pension Fund and the Social Security […]...
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Ahmad Alavi
Generation of the 1980s: Hard Yesterdays, Harder Todays, Vanished Tomorrows/ Fereshteh Goli
In Iran, pension funds are financial-social institutions established to provide for individuals during old age and retirement. Their mechanisms rely on collecting insurance premiums from the workforce (employees and employers) and investing these funds, so that monthly pensions and other legal benefits can be paid to retirees. In essence, these institutions operate based on an […]...
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Fereshteh Goli
Retirement in Iran: End of Work or Onset of Poverty?/ Reza Herisi
In the lexicon of nations, retirement is synonymous with honor, comfort, and reaping the fruits of a lifetime of labor. It is not the end, but the beginning of a new chapter in life—a time when the retiree, free from the daily grind, devotes themselves to family, self, and personal interests. This concept represents an […]...
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Reza Harisi
The Teachers’ Reserve Fund and the Grand Deception Played on Educators/ Arash Mohammadi
Now that I’ve reached retirement, I sit and reflect—one by one—on all the miseries I tried to overcome during the thirty years I went to and from school. I inhaled chalk dust, developed trembling knees, suffered nervous disorders… yet those miseries never ended. I sit and think about which of life’s wounds I can possibly […]...
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Arash Mohammadi
Legal and Economic Challenges of Pension Fund Bankruptcy in Iran/ Maryam Hosseini
Pension funds are the cornerstone of economic security and social justice in any country. These institutions, by collecting insurance premiums from workers and employers, allow retirees to enjoy a dignified life after the end of their working period. In Iran, multiple pension funds, including the Civil Servants Pension Fund, the Military Pension Fund, and the […]...
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Created By:
مریم حسینی
Women Kolbars: The Burden of Poverty on Forgotten Shoulders/ Pardis Parsa
Kolbari, a practice most common in the provinces of Kurdistan, Kermanshah, and West Azerbaijan, is a phenomenon tightly intertwined with structural poverty, underdevelopment, and centralized governance policies. The state, through continuous underdevelopment of non-Shia and non-Persian regions, has exacerbated this issue—particularly in the Kurdish border areas. Years of neglect, historical insecurity, and a securitized view […]...
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Created By:
Pardis Parsa