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InternetNews July 9, 2009 Kenneth Corbin |
New Calls for Global Web Censorship Probe Following social media flurry in Iran and China, lawmaker calls for a hearing to look into online censorship abroad. |
InternetNews June 16, 2009 Alex Goldman |
Twitter, NTT Avoid Cutting Off Iran Protests As protests in Iran continue, Twitter and its Web host adjusted to current events, making this just the latest intersection between social media and government. |
BusinessWeek October 31, 2005 Stanley Reed |
Iran: So Much For Harmony At The Top Will Ahmadinejad's emergence be the event that leads to the regime's demise? |
Reason February 2006 Michael Young |
Persian Letters Three personal accounts of modern Iran: Lipstick Jihad: A Memoir of Growing Up Iranian in America and American in Iran, by Azadeh Moaveni... Even After All This Time: A Story of Love, Revolution, and Leaving Iran, by Afschineh Latifi... etc. |
BusinessWeek February 4, 2010 Stanley Reed |
A Modern B-School -- in Tehran Iranian executives figure their homeland needs some good MBAs. |
PC Magazine June 18, 2009 Sascha Segan |
Learning from Iran's Twitter Revolution China, Iran, and France are all teaching lessons about broadband access that we in the U.S. need to hear. |
BusinessWeek December 11, 2006 Stanley Reed |
Surprise: Oil Woes In Iran Flagging output from its vast oil reserves could diminish Tehran's influence. |
BusinessWeek August 6, 2007 Reed, Sasseen & Pirouz |
Iran: The Buck Stops Here The U.S. is blocking dollar transactions to isolate Tehran. |
Parameters Autumn 2007 Christopher Hemmer |
Responding to a Nuclear Iran What should American foreign policy be if current efforts to discourage Iran from developing nuclear weapons fail? |
AskMen.com |
The Space Race, Part II Iran announced it has launched a menagerie of animals -- including a mouse, two turtles and worms -- into space on a research rocket, a feat President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said showed Iran could defeat the West in the battle of technology. |
Reason September 2004 Marc C. Johnson |
Chatroom Revolutionaries Iran's dissidents and exiles discover the Web and are sending encrypted and compressed documents via U.S.-based free e-mail accounts, a tactic also used by organized criminals, terrorists, spies, journalists, and even businessmen. |
The Motley Fool March 30, 2007 David Lee Smith |
Does Iran Really Matter? With its vital geographic location, its financial back to the wall, and its significant position within OPEC, Iran should be taken very, very seriously. Investors must monitor emerging geopolitical strains while retaining their international energy representation in their portfolios. |
Salon.com September 18, 2000 Hadani Ditmars |
Let Googoosh sing For over two decades, Iran's reigning queen of pop has been strictly forbidden to perform. Now she's got a passport, a string of sold-out U.S. stadiums and an angry government back home. |
AskMen.com |
What To Do About Iran? President Barack Obama is in a box over Iran, caught between affinity for emboldened reformists and caution about further alienating a hard-line Islamic regime he wants to dissuade from seeking nuclear weapons. |
BusinessWeek July 31, 2006 Stanley Reed |
Behind Iran's Defiant Face Oil money flows, but business confidence and foreign investment are flagging. |
Reason April 2002 Jesse Walker |
Soundbite: Dissent via Satellite Before the revolution of 1979, Zia Atabay was a successful pop singer in Iran. Now 60, he presides over National Iranian Television, a two-year-old, Los Angeles-based satellite TV station that broadcasts cultural and political programming to Iranians around the world... |
BusinessWeek November 29, 2004 Stan Crock |
Iran's Nukes: The Crisis Is Far From Over In the end the world may have to learn to live with a nuclear Iran -- and the regional proliferation that could ensue. That's a sober prospect for the Bush Administration. |
Mother Jones May/Jun 2001 Camelia Entekhabi-Fard |
Behind the Veil Westerners see Iran's mandatory veil as a symbol of repression. But under cover of the hejab, Islamic women have gained more freedom than they -- or the fundamentalists -- could have imagined... |