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SHEEHAN | Iran’s Assault on Academic Freedom | The Hill | Op-Ed |

Posted in 9-11, academic freedom, advisory board, Al Jazeera, american political science association, analysis, APSA, authoritarian, Ayatollah Khomeini, baghdad, bipartisan, CIA, civil liberties, civil unrest, college of public affairs, congress, counterterrorism, debate, Declaration of Principles on Academic Freedom, democracy, democrat, diplomacy, dissident, Dr. Ivan Sascha Sheehan, education, european union, foreign policy, foreign policy analysis, freedom, fundamentalism, global, human rights, human security, international order, international relations, international studies association, iran, iranian revolution, iraq, irgc, ISA, ISIS, israel, Ivan Sascha Sheehan, Joint Statement on the Right to Education and Academic Freedom in Iran, leadership, media, middle east, obama, policy, political repression, political science, politics, Professor Ivan Sascha Sheehan, protest, regime change, regime change from within, republican, research, rouhani, scholarly, senate, senate foreign relations committee, sheehan, social science, state department, teaching, tehran, terror tagging, terrorism, the hill, think-tank, threat, turkey, U.N. General Assembly, u.s. foundation for liberty, united nations, unrest, white house, yemen with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on September 11, 2016 by Professor Sheehan

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SHEEHAN | Iran’s Assault on Academic Freedom | The Hill | Op-Ed | 11 September 2016

On the 15th anniversary of the September 11 terrorist attacks, Dr. Ivan Sascha Sheehan – Associate Professor of Public and International Affairs – weighs in at the congressional newspaper The Hill to call attention to the importance of “Academic Freedom” and to highlight its importance to democratic discourse in the Middle East. Learn more about the valuable work undertaken by the US-based organization Scholars at Risk, a network of individuals and academic institutions that promotes the principles of academic freedom around the globe.

Excerpts via @TheHill: In totalitarian societies, power is maintained in part by the control of memory and reinvention of the past. While all societies promote a collective history, totalitarian states tend to advocate a single authorized version. In contemporary Iran, revolutionary ideology and memory itself has been reconstructed to erase any trace of the role of democratic-leaning students and academics in creating an official narrative that implies that the revolution was not about freedom or rights but only about Islamic identity. Recovering silenced accounts of the past has the potential to challenge dominant narratives and become a tool for advocates for change…

As the world pays tribute to the 15th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, it is important for U.S. officials to champion the freedom to think, write and teach freely and consider all of the implications this has for the development of tolerant and pluralistic societies. By supporting academic freedom as a universal commitment, U.S. leaders can make a small contribution toward a more democratic discourse in the Middle East and uphold a basic value too often taken for granted in the West. #PDF

Dr. Sheehan is the Director of the graduate programs in Negotiations & Conflict Management and Global Affairs & Human Security in the College of Public Affairs at the University of Baltimore.

For additional research or media related updates or to learn more about Dr. Sheehan, follow him on Twitter @ProfSheehan or link to his research profiles.

Social Media: @ProfSheehan / @PublicAffairsUB

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SHEEHAN: An Opportunity to Focus on Human Rights in Iran | Al Jazeera | Op-Ed

Posted in @AJEnglish, @TheIranDeal, advisory board, Al Jazeera, al jazeera english, analysis, arak, ashraf, assad, baghdad, ballistic missiles, bipartisan, camp liberty, chemical weapons, china, CIA, civil unrest, clinton, college of public affairs, congress, congressional oversight, counterterrorism, covert, crimes against humanity, democracy, democrat, deterrence, diplomacy, dissident, Dr. Ivan Sascha Sheehan, education, european union, evidence-based, farsi, fordow, foreign policy, foreign policy analysis, freedom, fundamentalism, geneva, global, gulf cooperation council, haider al-abadi, hostages, House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Terrorism and Non-Proliferation, human rights, human security, IAEA, inspections, intelligence, international relations, international security studies, iran, iraq, irgc, ISIS, Ivan Sascha Sheehan, kerry, leadership, media, MEK, MI6, middle east, mossad, natanz, NCRI, negotiation, nonproliferation, nuclear, obama, P5+1, parchin, paris, PMOI, policy, political science, politics, preemptive, presidential election, Professor Ivan Sascha Sheehan, protest, regime change, regime change from within, republican, research, rouhani, sanctions, sectarian conflict, security studies, senate, senate foreign relations committee, sheehan, shiite, state department, sunni, syria, tehran, terror tagging, terrorism, think-tank, threat, U.N. General Assembly, u.s. foundation for liberty, united nations, unrest, war, weapons, white house, yemen, zarif with tags , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , on September 28, 2015 by Professor Sheehan

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SHEEHAN: An Opportunity to Focus on Human Rights in Iran | Al Jazeera | Op-Ed | 28 Sept 2015 | Print #PDF

As the United Nations General Assembly gets underway, Dr. Ivan Sascha Sheehan, Associate Professor of Public and International Affairs, weighs in at Al Jazeera on the human rights situation in Iran and the unique opportunity before world leaders.

Excerpts:

“The Iranian regime continues to execute its citizens at a higher rate than any U.N. member state. In fact the regime boasts the highest rate of executions per capita in the world, surpassing even China. More than two thousand have been executed on President Hassan Rouhani’s watch in just two years, more than in any similar period in the past twenty-five years.

Robert Kagan of the Brookings Institution makes the case that regime change in Teheran is the “best nonproliferation policy.” But regime change from within may also be the best strategy to uphold human rights.

U.S. President Barack Obama makes a mistake by treating Tehran as a fixture of the Middle East landscape but other U.S. officials need not make the same mistake. International law does not simply guarantee sovereignty. It upholds human rights. States are instruments of and by the people, not the other way around.”

Dr. Sheehan is the Director of the graduate programs in Negotiations & Conflict Management and Global Affairs & Human Security in the College of Public Affairs at the University of Baltimore.

For additional research or media related updates or to learn more about Dr. Sheehan, follow him on Twitter @ProfSheehan or link to his research profiles.

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