Farazmand, a former bureaucrat in the Pahlavi state
administration, argues that the latter functioned more to maintain
the state and to control society than to provide its population
with services and with help for development. In the long run, such
a self-serving thrust proved destructive and was one reason for the
state's final collapse in the 1979 revolution. "Choice"
Covering the period from 1950 through 1988 this book examines
the role of a large bureaucracy under the Shah and
post-revolutionary changes in that bureaucracy under the Islamic
Republic. It focuses on the role of one of the most powerful
bureaucracies in Iran, the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural
Development (MARD). The author explains how the MARD transformed
rural Iran from a feudalistic social system to a capitalistic
system of economy. It helped maintain and enhance the Pahlavi
regime under the Shah by developing and guarding capitalism in
rural Iran. These two objectives were achieved through rural
bureaucratization and extension of the State's control to the
remotest areas of Iran. The author also discusses the impact of the
Revolution of 1978-79 on Iranian bureaucracy.
Iran has been one of the oldest historical bureaucratic empires
the world has ever known. During the Pahlavi regime, bureaucracy
was the main instrument of policy formulation and ligitimation.
This book fills many of the gaps in our present knowledge of
Iranian bureaucracy, particularly in relation to agrarian reform
and regime politics. Ali Farazman has based his study on primary
data including 150 interviews, the examination of numerous
government documents, and, as a former Iranian administrator,
direct observations. MARD was chosen as this book's focus for
several reasons. It was central to the Shah's regime during the
1960s-1970s. Until the 1960s three quarters of Iran's population
lived in rural areas under a feudal system. During this period MARD
grew at an unprecedented rate. Through land reform it created a new
class of allies for the Shah. It was instrumental in the
destruction of Iran's agriculture, making it dependent on foreign
imports. It contributed nine million rural migrants to the cities
ultimately fueling the Revolution of 1978-79. The author has chosen
MARD as representative of a powerful Iranian bureaucracy.
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