In this episode, Hossein Raisi discusses the legal deadlocks in the Islamic Republic:
Whether four decades of efforts by independent lawyers—and even the limited presence of women in some administrative sectors of the judiciary—have brought any real change to discriminatory laws.
At the same time, we address one of the most painful legal wounds in Iran:
Why are there thousands of stateless children under the shadow of the Supreme Leader’s rule?
Can a child born as a result of rape or sexual violence obtain legal identity?
And what solutions exist to end this crisis?
This conversation tells the story of where the law in Iran has stalled, and where civil society, quietly and persistently, continues to move forward.
The Ravi–Ham-Avā podcast series aims to expand the national discourse around universal values, democracy, the separation of religion and state, human rights, gender equality, and the preservation of Iran’s territorial integrity.
Within such a framework, we can move along the path of collective wisdom toward a free and dignified Iran—for all Iranians, regardless of belief, thought, gender, ethnicity, or background.
“Government of the people, by the people, and for the people.”