Sunday, October 26, 2025
  • English
  • Français
  • فارسی
  • عربى
PODCASTS
NCRI Women Committee Women Resistance Freedom
  • Home
  • NEWS
    • Women’s News
    • Articles
    • Statements
  • PUBLICATIONS
    • Monthlies
    • Documents
    • Reference Library
  • ABOUT US
    • The NCRI Women’s Committee
    • Gender Equality
    • Women’s Platform
  • MARYAM RAJAVI
    • Maryam Rajavi
    • Maryam Rajavi Speeches
    • The Plan on Women’s Rights and Freedoms
    • Ten-Point Plan for the future of Iran
  • VANGUARDS
    • The Fallen for Freedom
    • Heroines in Chain
    • Women of Iranian Resistance
    • Famous Women
    • Women in History
  • EVENTS
    • IWD Conferences
    • Activities
    • IWD Speeches
    • Solidarity
  • VIDEO
    • Videos
    • IWD Videos
  • PODCAST
  • DONATE
  • CONTACT US
No Result
View All Result
NCRI Women Committee Women Resistance Freedom
  • Home
  • NEWS
    • Women’s News
    • Articles
    • Statements
  • PUBLICATIONS
    • Monthlies
    • Documents
    • Reference Library
  • ABOUT US
    • The NCRI Women’s Committee
    • Gender Equality
    • Women’s Platform
  • MARYAM RAJAVI
    • Maryam Rajavi
    • Maryam Rajavi Speeches
    • The Plan on Women’s Rights and Freedoms
    • Ten-Point Plan for the future of Iran
  • VANGUARDS
    • The Fallen for Freedom
    • Heroines in Chain
    • Women of Iranian Resistance
    • Famous Women
    • Women in History
  • EVENTS
    • IWD Conferences
    • Activities
    • IWD Speeches
    • Solidarity
  • VIDEO
    • Videos
    • IWD Videos
  • PODCAST
  • DONATE
  • CONTACT US
No Result
View All Result
NCRI Women Committee
No Result
View All Result
Home Articles
Despite Rising University Enrollment, Iranian Regime Shuts Women Out of the Workforce

Despite Rising University Enrollment, Iranian Regime Shuts Women Out of the Workforce

Despite Rising University Enrollment, Iranian Regime Shuts Women Out of the Workforce

June 16, 2025
in Articles
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Despite a sharp increase in higher education among Iranian women in recent decades, the clerical regime continues to block their access to meaningful employment, reinforcing an outdated and discriminatory gender ideology that sidelines women as mere homemakers.

A researcher at the Institute for Cultural and Civilizational Studies in Iran openly criticized the regime’s deeply embedded gender division of labor. (ILNA news agency, May 12, 2025)

The warnings by Khadijeh Keshavarz come amid rising frustration among Iranian women—particularly those with higher education degrees—who find themselves systematically excluded from the workforce. It appears that the regime has weaponized economic stagnation and official platforms to perpetuate systemic gender apartheid under the guise of tradition and culture.

Education Without Employment: A Dead-End for Iranian Women

Over the past three decades, there has been a significant increase in Iranian women pursuing higher education. From the mid-1990s onward, female participation in university entrance exams surged, and women began outnumbering men in many academic fields.

However, this educational advancement has not translated into employment. The labor market remains firmly closed to them, with the regime failing to create economic structures that include or benefit educated women.

Keshavarz noted that the official economic participation rate—which includes the employed and those actively seeking jobs—remains low for women. Based on 2021 labor force data, over 40% of unemployed individuals with higher education were women, with women comprising nearly 72% of that group.

This staggering disparity illustrates a brutal contradiction: women invest in education only to be shut out of the job market upon graduation.

Despite Rising University Enrollment, Iranian Regime Shuts Women Out of the Workforce
Despite Rising University Enrollment, Iranian Regime Shuts Women Out of the Workforce

State-Endorsed Gender Roles: A Tool for Suppression

Instead of addressing the employment crisis, the regime has doubled down on patriarchal narratives. The Iranian regime reinforces a rigid ideology that men are breadwinners while women belong in the home. These messages are broadcast through state media, official speeches, and even educational settings, conditioning women to internalize inequality as cultural destiny.

This narrative is not new. It is a continuation of a state-driven gender order that began during the clerical regime’s inception in 1979, which brought about a deeply repressive system.

The regime’s messaging has shifted only slightly over the years, now offering university education as a way for women to “become better mothers” or “more companionable wives”—a disturbing rebranding of intellectual subjugation.

In conversations with female students at Iran’s top universities, many still express hopes for professional growth and self-fulfillment through education. Yet their hopes are increasingly crushed by a job market unwelcoming to female professionals and a government committed to their marginalization.

Normalization of Women’s Unemployment in Deprived Areas

The situation is particularly dire in peripheral provinces and marginalized areas, such as Ilam in western Iran or Sistan and Baluchestan in the southeast, where job prospects for women are practically nonexistent. In these regions, the gendered division of labor becomes even more extreme. Women with degrees often accept unstable, low-paying positions—such as contract teaching at private schools—or are forced into informal sectors like street vending and home-based work.

ILNA shared the story of a woman with a master’s degree in mathematics from the University of Ilam, who now works precariously in a private school without job security or financial stability. With such dismal prospects, many women find themselves adopting the regime’s patriarchal ideology simply as a form of psychological survival, convincing themselves that being dependent on a husband is normal or even preferable.

This manufactured dependency is not a cultural accident; it is the result of a calculated state policy to exclude women from the economy while maintaining social control. The Iranian regime uses economic strangulation to discipline women into submission, normalizing joblessness through the reinforcement of religious and cultural dogma.

Despite Rising University Enrollment, Iranian Regime Shuts Women Out of the Workforce
Despite Rising University Enrollment, Iranian Regime Shuts Women Out of the Workforce

An Educated but Oppressed Generation

Iran’s broader economic collapse, high inflation, widespread unemployment, and a lack of meaningful growth further darken the picture.

The regime’s mismanagement and prioritization of militarism and internal repression over economic development have created a society with no room for its educated citizens. Even male university graduates face exclusion, with the market favoring unskilled or informal labor over the educated, simply because the system cannot absorb skilled workers.

Today, many of the educated are funneled into unstable, underpaid jobs or excluded entirely from the labor force. Some 4–5% of women have disappeared from official labor statistics in the past two decades, not because they stopped working, but because their precarious, off-the-books jobs are not officially counted. (ILNA, May 12, 2025)

Yet in areas like arts, literature, sports, and grassroots activism—including NGOs—some women remain active despite the odds. This reflects a new, socially aware generation of Iranian women—one that is educated, globally informed, and unwilling to accept the lies they are fed. However, access to these spaces is often limited to middle-class urban women. For women in deprived provinces, these paths are often out of reach.

No Reform Without Regime Change

The Iranian regime’s systemic oppression of women goes far beyond ideology—it is built into the laws, the economic fabric, media messaging, and education system. This is not a matter of flawed policies or poor implementation. It is the logical outcome of a regime whose survival depends on silencing half its population.

Until this clerical regime is dismantled, Iranian women, no matter how educated, skilled, or ambitious, will continue to be relegated to second-class status. True change can only come from regime change. Until then, the dreams of Iranian women for autonomy, equality, and economic independence will remain not just deferred, but deliberately destroyed.

Despite Rising University Enrollment, Iranian Regime Shuts Women Out of the Workforce
Despite Rising University Enrollment, Iranian Regime Shuts Women Out of the Workforce
Tags: education
ShareTweetPinShareSendShare

Related Posts

Broken Schools, Defiant Students: Iran Kicks Off a New Academic Year

September 22, 2025
Broken Schools, Defiant Students: Iran Kicks Off a New Academic Year

TEHRAN – September dawn.In the narrow lanes of a south-Tehran slum, eleven-year-old Zahra clutches a worn schoolbag and pauses before a rusted lock on her classroom door. Her...

Read moreDetails

Education Crisis in Iran and the Plight of Girls

September 21, 2025
Education Crisis in Iran and the Plight of Girls

Education Crisis in Iran: Each autumn, the start of Iran’s school year should signal hope and opportunity. Instead, it highlights a system in decay, where millions of children—particularly...

Read moreDetails

Gas Leak at Ilam University Girls’ Dormitory Sickens 17 Students

June 3, 2025
Gas Leak at Ilam University Girls’ Dormitory Sickens 17 Students

Ilam University: In the early hours of Saturday, May 31, a gas leak at a girls’ dormitory at Ilam University resulted in the poisoning of 17 female students....

Read moreDetails

Alarming Rise in School Dropout Rates Among Girls in Iran

May 31, 2025
Alarming Rise in School Dropout Rates Among Girls in Iran

Poverty, Gender Discrimination, and Child Marriage at the Core In Iran, thousands of children fall out of the education system every year—a trend that is particularly alarming when...

Read moreDetails

School Van Overturns, Injuring Six Female Students

May 26, 2025
School Van Overturns, Injuring Six Female Students

In yet another tragic accident involving school transport, a school van overturned on Saturday, May 24, 2025, in Alborz Province, injuring six female students and the driver.While fortunately...

Read moreDetails
Next Post
Anna Jarvis: The Woman Who Founded Mother’s Day and Fought to Protect Its Meaning

Anna Jarvis: The Woman Who Founded Mother’s Day and Fought to Protect Its Meaning

Documents

The Gendered Dimensions of the Water Crisis in Iran: Impacts on Women’s Health, Livelihoods, and Security

The Gendered Dimensions of the Water Crisis in Iran: Impacts on Women’s Health, Livelihoods, and Security

October 12, 2025

How Iranian Women Shoulder the Heavy Burden of a Deepening Crisis The water crisis in Iran has moved far beyond...

The Failure of Iran's Population Growth Law Despite the Repression of Women A Glance at a Costly and Ineffective Policy

The Failure of Iran’s Population Growth Law Despite the Repression of Women

August 24, 2025

A Glance at a Costly and Ineffective Policy The “Youthful Population Law” in Iran vs. Women’s Human Rights Following a...

Widowed Women in Iran: Main Problems and Challenges

Widowed Women in Iran: Main Problems and Challenges

June 22, 2025

Widowed Women in Iran, Alone and Oppressed in the Shadow of Discrimination In the Iranian legal system, where gender-based discrimination...

Monthlies

September 2025 Report: One Woman Executed Every 4 Days in Iran
Monthlies

September 2025 Report: One Woman Executed Every 4 Days in Iran

September 30, 2025
AUGUST 2025 Report: Dual Repression of Political Prisoners and Their Families
Monthlies

August 2025 Report: Dual Repression of Political Prisoners and Their Families

August 31, 2025
July 2025 Report:: A Crime in Progress: The Looming Threat of Another Massacre of Political Prisoners in Iran
Monthlies

July 2025 Report: A Crime in Progress: The Threat of Another Massacre in Iran

July 25, 2025
June 2025 Report: Femicide, Structural Violence in Iran
Monthlies

June 2025 Report: Femicide, Structural Violence in Iran

June 30, 2025

Articles

Maryam Rajavi trailblazing the road to gender parity in a free Iran

Maryam Rajavi trailblazing the road to gender parity in a free Iran

October 20, 2025

Maryam Rajavi trailblazing the road to gender parity in a free Iran October 22, marks the anniversary of the announcement...

Eradication of Poverty: Women Heads of Households, the Voiceless Pillars of Poor Families

International Day for the Eradication of Poverty: Women Heads of Households, the Voiceless Pillars of Poor Families

October 17, 2025

While the world, on the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty (October 17), emphasizes social justice, human dignity, and...

Breaking Barriers: The Struggle of the Iranian Girl Child

Breaking Barriers: The Struggle of the Iranian Girl Child

October 10, 2025

October 11 – International Day of the Girl Child The Struggle of the Iranian Girl Child: Every year on October...

The Fallen for Freedom

Fatemeh Farshchian
The Fallen for Freedom

Fatemeh Farshchian

September 11, 2025
Nosrat Ramezani
The Fallen for Freedom

Nosrat Ramezani

May 1, 2025
Sussan Mirzaei: A Trailblazer in Iran’s Struggle for Freedom and Democracy
The Fallen for Freedom

Sussan Mirzaei

May 1, 2025
The Life of Marzieh Ahmadi Oskouei
The Fallen for Freedom

The Life of Marzieh Ahmadi Oskouei

April 26, 2025

ABOUT US

NCRI Women Committee

We work extensively with Iranian women outside the country and maintain a permanent contact with women inside Iran. The Women’s Committee is actively involved with many women’s rights organizations and NGO’s and the Iranian diaspora.
The committee is a major source of much of the information received from inside Iran with regards to women. Attending UN Human Rights Council meetings and other international or regional conferences on women’s issues and engaging in a relentless battle against the Iranian regime’s misogyny are part of the activities of members and associates of the committee.

CATEGORIES

  • Activities
  • Articles
  • Documents
  • Famous Women
  • Heroines in Chain
  • IWD Conferences
  • IWD Speeches
  • IWD Videos
  • Maryam Rajavi
  • Maryam Rajavi Speeches
  • Monthlies
  • Podcast
  • Reference Library
  • Solidarity
  • Statements
  • The Fallen for Freedom
  • Videos
  • Women in History
  • Women in Leadership
  • Women of Iranian Resistance
  • Women's News

BROWSE BY TAG

Child marriage coronavirus education execution forced hijab Gender Gap Generation Equality Honor killings Iran Teachers Maryam Akbari Monfared Nurses Plan on Women's Rights and Freedoms Poverty Prisoners Protests rural women Saba Kord Afshari The girl child Violence against women Women's Leadership Women Heads of Household Zeinab Jalalian

The copyright of all the material published on this website has been registered under © 2016 the Women’s Committee of the National Council of Resistance of Iran. To obtain permission to copy, redistribute or publish the material published on this website, you should write to the NCRI Women’s Committee. Please include the link of the original article on our website, women.ncr-iran.org.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
    • Women’s News
    • Articles
    • Statements
  • Publications
    • Monthlies
    • Documents
    • Reference Library
  • About Us
    • The NCRI Women’s Committee
    • Gender Equality
    • Women’s Platform
  • Maryam Rajavi
    • Maryam Rajavi
    • Maryam Rajavi Speeches
    • Ten Point Plan for Iran
    • The Plan on Women’s Rights and Freedoms
  • Vanguards
    • The Fallen for Freedom
    • Heroines in Chain
    • Women of Iranian Resistance
    • Famous Women
    • Women in History
  • Events
    • IWD Conferences
    • Activities
    • IWD Speeches
    • Solidarity
  • Video
    • Videos
    • IWD Videos
  • Podcast
  • Donate
  • Contact us
  • فارسی
  • عربی
  • Français

The copyright of all the material published on this website has been registered under © 2016 the Women’s Committee of the National Council of Resistance of Iran. To obtain permission to copy, redistribute or publish the material published on this website, you should write to the NCRI Women’s Committee. Please include the link of the original article on our website, women.ncr-iran.org.