fbpx
Wikipedia

Iranian Americans

Iranian Americans are citizens or nationals of the United States who are of Iranian ancestry. Iranian Americans are among the most highly educated people in the United States.[10][11] They have historically excelled in business, academia, science, the arts, and entertainment. Many have become doctors, engineers, lawyers, and tech entrepreneurs.[12][13]

Iranian Americans
ایرانیانِ آمریکا
Iranian American population by state
Total population
470,341 (ACS, 2011[1])
500,000–1,500,000+ (other estimates)[2][3][4][5] See also Iranian diaspora
Regions with significant populations
California (largest populations in Los Angeles, Orange and San Diego counties), New York, New Jersey,[6] Texas, Connecticut, Maryland, Virginia, Washington, D.C., Illinois, Michigan,[7] Northeast Ohio,[8] Florida, Georgia
Languages
American English,
As well native (Persian, Azerbaijani, Armenian, Kurdish, and other languages of Iran).
Religion
Islam 31%, Atheism/Realism/Humanism 11%, Agnosticism 8%, Baháʼí 7%, Judaism 5%, Protestanism 5%, Roman Catholicism 2%, Zoroastrianism 2%, Other 15% including Mandaeanism, and No Response 15%.[9][a]

^a A 2012 national telephone survey of a sample of 400 Iranian-Americans in the Los Angeles area, commissioned by the Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans and conducted by Zogby Research Services, asked the respondents what their religions were. The survey had a cooperation rate of 31.2%.

Most Iranian Americans arrived in the United States after 1979, as a result of the Iranian Revolution and the fall of the Persian monarchy, with over 40% settling in California, specifically Los Angeles. Unable to return to Iran, they have created many distinct ethnic enclaves, such as the Los Angeles Tehrangeles community in Westwood, Los Angeles.

Based on a 2012 announcement by the National Organization for Civil Registration, an organization of the Ministry of Interior of Iran, the United States has the greatest number of Iranians outside the country.[4][14]

Research by the Iranian Studies Group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2004 estimated the number of Iranian Americans at 691,000, about half of which live in the US state of California.[10][15][16]

Terminology edit

"Iranian-American" is sometimes used interchangeably with "Persian-American",[17][18][19][20] partly due to the fact that, in the Western world, Iran was known as "Persia".[21] On the Nowruz of 1935, Reza Shah Pahlavi asked foreign delegates to use the term Iran, the endonym of the country used since the Sasanian Empire, in formal correspondence. Since then the use of the word "Iran" has become more common in Western countries. This also changed the usage of the terms for Iranian nationality, and the common adjective for citizens of Iran changed from "Persian" to "Iranian." In 1959, the government of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, Reza Shah Pahlavi's son, announced that both "Persia" and "Iran" could officially be used interchangeably.[22] The issue is still debated today.[23][24]

There is a tendency among Iranian-Americans to categorize themselves as "Persian" rather than "Iranian", mainly to dissociate themselves from the negative stereotypes of Iranians in media.[17] Some Iranian-Americans also don't prefer "Iranian" to disassociate themselves with the Islamic Republic of Iran,[25] yet this rationale has been criticized as the term "Iran" was widely used before 1979 as well.[17] The term "Iranian" is regarded as more inclusive than "Persian", as the term "Persian" excludes non-Persian ethnic minorities of Iran.[25] While the majority of Iranian-Americans come from Persian backgrounds, there is a significant number of non-Persian Iranians such as Azeris[26][27][28] and Kurds within the Iranian-American community,[25][29] leading some scholars to believe that the label "Iranian" is more inclusive, since the label "Persian" excludes non-Persian minorities.[25][30][31]

History edit

Early history edit

One of the first recorded Iranians to visit North America was Martin the Armenian, an Iranian-Armenian tobacco grower who settled in Jamestown, Virginia in 1618.[32][33] Mirza Mohammad Ali, also known as Hajj Sayyah, was an Iranian who came to North America in the 1800s. He was inspired to travel around the world due to the contradiction between the democratic ideals he read about and how his fellow Iranians were treated by their leaders. He began his travels as a 23-year-old looking for knowledge, to experience the lives of others, and to use that knowledge to help with Iran's progress. His stay in the United States lasted 10 years, and he traveled across the country from New York to San Francisco. He met a variety of influential American figures including President Ulysses S. Grant, who met with him on several occasions.[34] On 26 May 1875, Hajj Sayyah became the first Iranian to become an American citizen. He was imprisoned upon his return to Iran for taking a stand against living conditions there. He looked to the United States to protect him but to no avail.[34] During the peak period of worldwide emigration to the United States (1842–1903), only 130 Iranian nationals were known to have immigrated.[35]

First phase of emigration edit

The first wave of Iranian migration to the United States occurred from the late 1940s to 1977,[35] or 1979.[36] The United States was an attractive destination for students, as American universities offered some of the best programs in engineering and other fields, and were eager to attract students from foreign countries.[36] Iranian students, most of whom had learned English as a second language in Iran, were highly desirable as new students at colleges and universities in the United States.[36] By the mid-1970s, nearly half of all Iranian students who studied abroad did so in the United States.[36] By 1975, the Institute of International Education's annual foreign student census figures listed Iranian students as the largest group of foreign students in the United States, amounting to a total of 9% of all foreign students in the country.[36] As the Iranian economy continued to rise steadily in the 70s, it enabled many more Iranians to travel abroad freely.[36] Consequently, the number of Iranian visitors to the United States also increased considerably, from 35,088, in 1975, to 98,018, in 1977.[36][37] During the 1977–78 academic year, of about 100,000 Iranian students abroad, 36,220 were enrolled in American institutions of higher learning. During the 1978–79 academic year, on the eve of the revolution, the number of Iranian students enrolled in American institutions rose to 45,340, and in 1979–80, that number reached a peak of 51,310. At that time, according to the Institute of International Education, more students from Iran were enrolled in American universities than from any other foreign country.[35] The pattern of Iranian migration during this phase usually only involved individuals, not whole families.[35] Due to Iran's increasing demand for educated workers in the years before the revolution, the majority of the Iranian students in America intended to return home after graduation to work, especially those who had received financial aid from the Iranian government or from industry on condition of returning to take jobs upon graduation. Due to the drastic events of the 1979 Revolution, the students ended up staying in the United States as refugees.[35] These several thousand visitors and students unintentionally became the basis of the cultural, economic, and social networks that would enable large-scale immigration in the years that followed.[36]

Second phase edit

The second phase of Iranian migration began immediately before and after the Iranian Revolution of 1979 and the overthrow of the Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi,[35] and became significant in the early 1980s.[35] As Ronald H. Bayor writes, "The 1979 Revolution and the 1980–88 war with Iraq transformed Iran's class structure, politically, socially, and economically."[38] The revolution drastically changed the pattern and nature of Iranian emigration to the United States, while the Iran-Iraq War that ensued afterwards was also another factor that forced many of the best-educated and most wealthy families into exile in the United States and other countries. Once basically an issue of brain drain during the Pahlavi period, it was now predominantly an involuntary emigration of a relatively large number of middle- and upper-class families, including the movement of a considerable amount of wealth.[38] During and after the revolution, most students did not return to Iran, and those who did were gradually purged from the newly established Islamic Republic. Many students who graduated abroad after the revolution also did not return, due to the ruling clergy's repression. As a result, the educated elite who left Iran after the revolution, and the new graduates in the United States who chose not to return home, created a large pool of highly educated and skilled Iranian professionals in the United States. By 2002, an estimated 1.5 to 2.5 million Iranians lived abroad, mainly in North America and Europe, due to the Islamic government's authoritarian practices.[39]

A further notable aspect of the migration in this phase is that members of religious and ethnic minorities were starting to become disproportionally represented among the Iranian American community, most notably Baháʼís, Jews, Armenians, and Assyrians.[40] According to the 1980 US Census, there were 123,000 Americans of Iranian ancestry at that time.[41] Between 1980 and 1990, the number of foreign-born people from Iran in the United States increased by 74 percent.[10]

The revolution caused a drastic change in the Iranian culture. Iran was no longer a thriving country. This is part of the reason so many Iranians began to flee to America.[42]

Contemporary period edit

 
Max Amini, Persian American stand-up comedian.

The third phase of Iranian immigration started in 1995 and continues to the present.[43] According to the 2000 US Census, there were 283,225 Iranian-born people in the US.[44] According to the same 2000 US Census, there were 385,488 Americans of Iranian ancestry at that time.[45] The 2011 American Community Survey (ACS) estimate found 470,341 Americans with full or partial Iranian ancestry.[1] However, most experts believe that this is a problem of underrepresenting due to the fact that "many community members have been reluctant in identifying themselves as such because of the problems between Iran and the United States in the past two decades." and also because many were ethnic minorities (Jewish, Armenian, and Assyrian Iranians) who instead identify as the ethnic group they are part of rather than as Iranians.[46] Estimates of 1,000,000 and above are given by many Iranian and non-Iranian organizations, media, and scholars. Kenneth Katzman, specialist in Middle Eastern affairs and part of the Congressional Research Service, in December 2015 estimated the number at over 1,000,000.[47] Paul Harvey and Edward Blum of the University of Colorado and the University of San Diego in 2012 estimated their number at 1,000,000,[48] as well as Al-Jazeera.[49] According to the PAAIA (Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans), estimates range from 500,000 to 1,000,000,[50][51] numbers backed up by Ronald H. Bayor of the Georgia Institute of Technology as well.[52] The Atlantic stated that there were an estimated 1,500,000 Iranians in the United States in 2012.[53] The Iranian interest section in Washington, D.C., in 2003 claimed to hold passport information for approximately 900,000 Iranians in the US.[46][54]

Today, the United States contains the highest number of Iranians outside of Iran. The Iranian-American community has produced individuals notable in many fields, including medicine, engineering, and business.

Demographics edit

 
Relative population distribution estimate of 1st and 2nd generation Iranian Americans living in the United States by percentage of total population.[55]
  > 49% of all Iranians
  6%-9% of all Iranians
  2%-5% of all Iranians
  < 1% but may still be a notable population

Although Iranians have lived in the United States in relatively small numbers since the 1930s, a large number of Iranian-Americans immigrated to the United States after the Iranian Revolution of 1979. Data on this group is well documented by the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS). According to the 2000 US Census, there were 385,488 Americans of Iranian ancestry at that time.[45] In the 2011 ACS, the number of Americans of full or partial Iranian ancestry amounted c. 470,341.[1]

Population edit

Federal data on Iranian Americans in the 2010 United States Census was not according to race, but rather ancestry, which is collected by the annual American Community Survey (ACS). Data on Iranian ancestry from the annual ACS is available on the Census Bureau's American Factfinder website.[56][57] Racially, on the Census, Iranian Americans have been classified as a white American group.

Most experts believe that the underrepresented number of Iranian Americans in the ACS is a problem due to the fact that "many community members have been reluctant in identifying themselves as such because of the problems between Iran and the United States in the past two decades."[46] Estimations of 1,000,000 and above are given by many Iranian and non-Iranian organizations, media, and scholars. Kenneth Katzman, specialist in Middle Eastern affairs and part of the Congressional Research Service, estimated their number at over 1,000,000 in published December 2015.[47] Historians Paul Harvey and Edward Blum estimate their number at 1,000,000 in 2012,[48] as well as Al-Jazeera.[49] According to the PAAIA (Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans), estimates range from 500,000 to 1,000,000,[50] numbers backed by Ronald H. Bayor of the Georgia Institute of Technology.[52] The Atlantic, in 2012, stated that there are an estimated 1,500,000 Iranians in the United States.[53] The Iranian interest section in Washington D.C., in 2003, claimed to hold passport information for approximately 900,000 Iranians in the US.[46][54]

According to research done by the Iranian Studies Group, an independent academic organization at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT),[58] Iranian Americans are most likely far more numerous in the United States than census data indicate. The group estimates that the number of Iranian Americans may have topped 691,000 in 2004—more than twice the figure of 338,000 cited in the 2000 U.S. census.[10][15]

Sources from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Iran have stated the United States has the highest number of Iranians outside the country, stating 1,500,000 Iranians who were born in Iran are living in the U.S. However this number only represents Iranian born population who moved to the U.S. at some point and does not include the number of U.S.-born Iranian-Americans and other groups with Iranian ancestors.[14][59]

Roughly half of the nation's Iranians reside in the state of California alone.[16]Other large communities include New York/New Jersey, which have 9.1% of the U.S.'s Iranian population, followed by Washington, D.C./Maryland/Virginia (8.3%) and Texas (6.7%).[7][60]

Approximately 6,000–10,000 Iranian Americans reside in the city of Chicago, while up to 30,000 reside in the Chicago metropolitan area. Some of this population is Iranian Assyrian.[61]

Kings Point, New York, a village in Great Neck, New York, is said to have the largest concentration of Iranians in the United States (nearly 30%).[62] However, unlike the population in Los Angeles, the Great Neck population is almost exclusively Jewish.[63]

Nashville, Tennessee has the largest Kurdish population in the United States, with many of them coming from Iran.

Significant Persian population centers edit

California edit
 
The Los Angeles metropolitan area has the largest concentration of Iranian-Americans. An area along Westwood Boulevard in Los Angeles has been officially designated Persian Square by the city.

It is widely believed that most Iranian-Americans in the United States are clustered in the large cities of California, namely Greater Los Angeles, the San Francisco Bay Area, San Diego, Sacramento, and Fresno. According to extrapolated U.S. Census data and other independent surveys done by Iranian-Americans themselves in 2009, there were an estimated one million Iranian-Americans living in the U.S.,[64] with the largest concentration—about 300,000 people—living in the greater Los Angeles area.[64][65] For this reason, the Westwood, L.A. area, with its Iranian American residents, is sometimes colloquially referred to as "Tehrangeles", "Irangeles", or "Little Persia" among Iranian-Americans.[66][67]

In 1985, the Los Angeles Times estimated 200,000 Iranian Americans were living in California; and by 1991 the estimate jumped to 800,000, however the accuracy of these numbers could be debated due to a lack of data.[68][66] In 1990, Los Angeles had a larger population of religious minorities than Muslims, who were the religious majority in Iran.[66]

Regarding Iranian-Americans of Armenian origin, the 1980 US Census put the number of Armenians living in Los Angeles at 52,400, of whom 71.9% were foreign born: 14.7% in Iran, 14.3% in the USSR, 11.5% in Lebanon, 9.7% in Turkey, 11.7% in other Middle Eastern countries (Egypt, Iraq, Israel, etc.), and the rest in other parts of the world.[69] Beverly Hills, Irvine, and Glendale all have large communities of Iranian Americans (much of the Iranian population in Glendale being of Armenian descent); 26% of the total population of Beverly Hills is Iranian Jewish, making it the city's largest religious community.[7][70][71]

Iranian Americans have formed ethnic enclaves in many affluent neighborhoods mostly in the Los Angeles metropolitan area. In Los Angeles, Iranians were concentrated in Tarzana, West Hills, Hidden Hills, Woodland Hills, Beverly Hills, Calabasas, Brentwood, and Rancho Palos Verdes.[72] Tarzana has the highest concentration of Iranians in Los Angeles County, according to the U.S. Census in 2000.[73]

Second generation Iranians located outside these concentrated cities showed high rates of marrying a non-Iranian and low literacy rates in Persian.[72]

Areas in Los Angeles with the highest concentrations of Persians (2015)
Rank Cities Percentage of population of Persian descent[74]
1 Beverly Hills 20.8%
2 West Los Angeles 12.2%
3 Westwood 10.3%
4 Tarzana, Los Angeles 10.3%
5 Woodland Hills, Los Angeles 8.8%
6 Bel Air, Los Angeles 8.8%
7 Century City 8.1%
8 Rancho Palos Verdes 3.7%

In San Diego County, the communities of La Jolla and Westlake village also held a large Iranian population. La Jolla was the first American city to have an Iranian American mayor Iraj Broomand.[75][76]

Texas edit

Texas also has a large population of Iranian descent.[77] And like California, Iranians in Texas are concentrated in the larger major cities of the state. Houston has the largest population of Iranians and Iranian expats, with an estimated 70,000 residents (50,000 in 1994[78]), mainly due to the Texas Medical Center and the presence of large energy companies. Houston contains a Persian business district including shops and restaurants that has been dubbed "Little Persia" by the Houston Press.[79][80] There are many Iranian Zoroastrians[81] and Baháʼís living there.[82][83]

Some of the more well known residents of the Houston area in the past or present are Jasmin Moghbeli, Susan Roshan, Shawn Daivari, Farinaz Koushanfar, and Kavon Hakimzadeh (captain of the USS Harry Truman Naval aircraft carrier[84]). Ibrahim Yazdi was a graduate of Baylor College of Medicine and Kamal Kharazi also is an alumnus of University of Houston. Hushang Ansary, an active philanthropist, has been a "founding benefactor" of the Houston Museum of Fine Arts.[85][86] The George Bush Presidential Library has a gallery named after him.[87][88] Iranians in Houston particularly came under the spotlight when Iranian student and activist Gelareh Bagherzadeh was murdered in Houston in 2012.[89] The perpetrator, Ali Irsan, was later convicted and sentenced to death for the crime,[90] an honor killing in retaliation against Bagherzadeh's encouragement of Irsan's daughter to leave Islam and marry a Christian man.[91][92] The other notable Iranian in Texas that gained national attention in recent years was UT Austin's Omid Kokabee who was imprisoned in Iran for political reasons.

The Dallas-Fort Worth metropolitan area is estimated to have over 30,000 Iranian-Americans. Iran's first astronaut Anousheh Ansari for many years was a resident of Plano, Texas, a suburb of Dallas-Fort Worth.[93] Dallas' Iranian community was large and influential enough to host US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo for a private visit in April 2019.[94][95] And San Antonio and Austin each are said to have 3000-5000 Iranian American residents each, who are mostly attracted to large academic centers of excellence such as South Texas Medical Center and UT Austin or the climate of the Texas Hill Country area that is not un-similar to the southern Iran Zagros Mountains region. The largest concentration of Mandaeans from Khuzestan outside the middle east are settled in the San Antonio area.[96][97] The Shah of Iran was also last hospitalized at San Antonio's Wilford Hall Ambulatory Surgical Center in Lackland Air Force Base during his last days.[98] This is the same base that trained many pilots of Iran's Royal Air Force before the 1979 revolution.

Religion edit

Many Iranian Americans are non-Muslim due to the religious composition of those fleeing the Iranian Revolution, which included a disproportionate share of Iran's religious minorities, as well as subsequent ex-Muslim asylum seekers and other conversions away from Islam. Many Iranian Americans identify as irreligious or Shiite, but a full one-fifth are Christians, Jews, Baháʼís, or Zoroastrians.[99] Additionally, there are also some Iranian Mandaeans, but they are very small in number. According to Pew Research, about 22% of those who left Islam in the United States are Iranian Americans.[100]

A 2012 national telephone survey of a sample of 400 Iranian-Americans, commissioned by the Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans and conducted by Zogby Research Services, asked the respondents what their religions were. The responses broke down as follows: Muslim 31%, atheist/realist/humanist 11%, agnostic 8%, Baháʼí 7%, Jewish 5%, Protestant 5%, Roman Catholic 2%, Zoroastrian 2%, "Other" 15%, and "No response" 15%.[9] The survey had a cooperation rate of 31.2%.[9] The margin of error for the results was +/- 5 percentage points, with higher margins of error for sub-groups.[9] Notably, the number of Muslims decreased from 42% in 2008 to 31% in 2012.[9][101]

According to Harvard University's Robert D. Putnam, the average Iranian is slightly less religious than the average American.[102] In the book Social Movements in 20th Century Iran: Culture, Ideology, and Mobilizing Frameworks, author Stephen C. Poulson adds that Western ideas are making Iranians irreligious.[103]

There are religious and ethnolinguistic differences among the Muslim, Jewish, Baháʼí, Zoroastrian, Christian, Armenian, Azerbaijani, Kurdish, and Assyrian groups.[104] Calculating the percentage of Christian Iranian-Americans is difficult because most Iranian Christians (especially those raised in the faith) are of Armenian or Assyrian origin; and, apart from identifying as Iranian, a number amongst them also strongly self-identifies as Armenian or Assyrian, rather than as (or apart from) Iranian.[36][105]

Ethnicity edit

The majority of Iranian-Americans are ethnic Persians, with sizeable ethnic minorities being Iranian Azerbaijanis, Armenians, Iranian Jews, Kurds, Assyrians, Mandaeans, Turkmen, Baloch, Arabs, among others.[106]

According to Hakimzadeh and Dixon in 2006, members of religious and ethnic minorities such as Baháʼís, Jews, Armenians, and Assyrians were disproportionately represented amongst the early exiles of the 1978–1979 revolution.[40]

Citizenship edit

According to DHS, in 2015, 13,114 people born in Iran were issued green cards, while 13,298 were issued one in 2016. In 2015, 10,344 Iranians became naturalized, with a further 9,507 in 2016.[107] Nearly all Iranians who reside in the United States are either citizens (81%) or permanent residents (15%) of the United States (2008 survey).[108] Iranian-Americans regard their culture and heritage as an important component of their day-to-day life and their overall identity within the United States.[109]

Integration edit

Four benchmarks are traditionally used to measure assimilation: language proficiency, intermarriage, spatial concentration, and socio-economic status.[citation needed] Per these criteria, one can determine with a significant degree of confidence that the Iranian-American community has made significant strides in successfully assimilating to a new culture and way of living.[36] According to a survey commissioned by the Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans (PAAIA) in 2008, only 21 percent of Iranian-Americans reported interacting mostly with other Iranian Americans outside of their workplace, demonstrating that most of them have successfully integrated into United States society.[36]

The intermarriage rate is very high among Iranian Americans.[36] It has been estimated that nearly 50 percent of Iranian-Americans who married between 1995 and 2007 married non-Iranian Americans.[36] Research has furthermore indicated that Iranian-Americans who are Muslim are more open to intermarry than those who are members of religious or ethnic minorities, such as Jews and Armenians.[36] Compared to men, Iranian women are less likely to mix or intermarry outside their group, which, according to the PAAIA, is likely because, as a group, they are more likely to adhere to traditional Iranian values, including making marriages that are approved by their families and are within Iranian cultural norms.[36] Regarding language proficiency in the United States among its immigrant groups, the first generation principally speaks their native language, the second generation speaks both English and their parents' language, and the third generation typically speaks only English, while maintaining a knowledge of some isolated words and phrases from their ancestral tongue.[36] The Iranian American community follows this pattern.[36]

Community Outreach edit

Camp Ayandeh, sponsored annually by the Iranian Alliances Across Borders (IAAB), has attracted children of the Iranian diaspora from multiple nations with the intention of uniting Iranian youth following the mass migration after the fall of the Shah.[110][111]

Education edit

According to Bayor, from the very beginning, Iranian immigrants differed from other arrivals in their high educational and professional achievements.[112] According to Census 2000, 50.9 percent of Iranian immigrants have attained a bachelor's degree or higher, compared to a 28.0 percent national average.[10] According to the latest census data available, more than one in four Iranian-Americans holds a master's or doctoral degree, the highest rate among 67 ethnic groups studied.[11]

A 1990 University of California, Los Angeles study showed that by virtue of education and occupation, native-born and Armenian-Americans of Iranian origin "tend to have the highest socioeconomic status... while those from Turkey have the lowest", although Turkish Armenians boast the highest rate of self-employment.[113] In 1988, a New York Times article claimed that Middle Eastern Armenians, which includes Armenians from Iran, preferred to settle in Glendale, California, while Armenian immigrants from the Soviet Union were attracted to Hollywood, Los Angeles.[114]

A study regarding Americans of Armenian descent showed that Armenians from Iran (Iranian-Armenians) are known for quick integration into American society:[115] for example, only 31% of Armenian Americans born in Iran claim not to speak English well,[116] while those Armenians from other nations were shown to have less success at integrating.

Occupations and income edit

The Small Business Administration (SBA) conducted a study that found Iranian immigrants among the top 20 immigrant groups with the highest rate of business ownership, contributing substantially to the U.S. economy. According to the report, there were 33,570 active and contributing Iranian American business owners in the U.S., with a 21.5% business ownership rate. The study also found that the total net business income generated by Iranian Americans was $2.56 billion.[117] Almost one in three Iranian-American households have annual incomes of more than $100,000 (compared to one in five for the overall U.S. population).[118] Ali Mostasahri, a founding member of the Iranian Studies Group, offers a reason for the relative success of Iranian-Americans compared to other immigrants. He believes that, unlike many other immigrants who left their home countries because of economic hardships, Iranians left due to social or religious reasons like the 1979 revolution.[15] About 50 percent of all working Iranian Americans are in professional and managerial occupations, a percentage greater than any other group in the United States (Bayor, 2011).[112]

Physicians edit

The earliest Iranian people in the U.S. were mostly young trainees who worked as medical interns or residents. Some established themselves to continue practice beyond the residency stage. Their motives to extend their stay in the United States were more for professional than economic reasons. Researchers from Johns Hopkins University in 1974 reported, in the Journal of the American Medical Association, that, in 1971, the number of Iranian physicians in the U.S. was 1,625. The authors further studied the causes for immigration by sending questionnaire to all Iranian MDs in the United States. According to the 660 respondents, the main reasons for migration were mandatory two-years' military service, low salaries as compared to the United States, expensive housing, and socio-political reasons.[119]

In 2013, another report was published, in the Archive of Iranian Medicine (AIM), saying that, post-revolution, the number of Iranian medical school graduates in the United States had grown to 5,045. Those who migrated to the U.S. after the 1979 revolution were mostly experienced physicians who came with their families and an intent to stay permanently. As of 2013, there are 5,050 Iranian medical school graduates in the United States.[120]

Prior to the revolution, the 1,626 physicians migrated to the United States were 15% of all Iranian medical school graduates, while the 5,045 medical graduates who migrated post-Islamic Revolution represent only 5% of total Iranian medical graduates. This is not indicative of the entire United States, merely of the areas in which most of the Iranian-American population is concentrated.[121]

Politics edit

 
Stephanie Bice the first Iranian American elected to Congress, from the Republican Party.
 
Most important issues to the Iranian-American community

Though Iranian-Americans have historically excelled in business, academia, and the sciences, they have traditionally shied away from participating in American politics or other civic activities.[64] Iranian-Americans do not appear to engage in American politics, as demonstrated by survey results from large cities showing only 10 percent of them voted in the 2004 election.[122]

In Los Angeles, Iranian Americans paid for a billboard to inform thousands of travelers on the 405 freeway of how the Iranian regime had murdered ten thousand political prisoners.[123]

An August 2008 Zogby International poll, commissioned by the Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans, found that approximately one-half of Iranian Americans identified themselves as registered Democrats, in contrast to one in eight as Republicans and one in four as independents (2008).[108] A 2019 Zogby International survey, commissioned by PAAIA, found that in the 2016 presidential election, 56% of Iranian Americans respondents voted for Hillary Clinton, the democratic candidate. The survey also states that 69% of Iranian American respondents planned to vote for the democratic candidate in the 2020 election.[124]

The same 2008 PAAIA poll indicates that more than half of Iranian Americans cite domestic U.S. issues, including issues that are not unique to Iranian Americans, as the most important to them. In contrast, one quarter of Iranian Americans cite foreign policy issues involving Iran–U.S. relations and less than one-in-ten cite the internal affairs of Iran as being of greatest importance to them.[108]

More recently, the 2019 Zogby International survey, commissioned by the Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans, found that one-half of Iranian American respondents consider foreign policy most important when voting.[125] This is a significant increase from the one quarter of Iranian Americans that reported foreign policy issues, such as the Iran-U.S. relationship, as important in 2008.

Similarly, the 2019 survey also suggested that 75% of Iranian American respondents perceived the Trump Administration's Iranian foreign policy negatively.[125] In 2017, the Trump administration put strict travel restrictions on travel to the United States from several countries, including Iran.[126] The survey indicates that this travel ban instituted by the Trump administration in 2017, received opposition from 76% of respondents. In contrast, only 16% of respondents supported the ban. The survey states that 70% of respondents have been personally affected by the travel ban, or had family and friends affected by the ban.[125]

From 1980 to 2004, more than one out of every four Iranian immigrants was a refugee or asylee.[10] The PAAIA/Zogby poll cites that almost three-quarters of Iranian-Americans believe the promotion of human rights and democracy in Iran is the most important issue relating to Iran–U.S. relations. About the same percentage believe diplomacy is the foreign policy approach towards Iran that would be in the best interest of the United States. 84% support establishing a U.S. Interest Section in Iran.[108] Nearly all Iranian Americans surveyed oppose any U.S. military attack against Iran.[127]

Ties to Iran edit

According to a survey conducted in 2009, more than six in ten Iranian Americans have immediate family members in Iran, and almost three in ten communicate with their families or friends in Iran at least several times a week. An additional four in ten communicate with their families or friends in Iran at least several times a month. This study indicates an unusually close relationship between Iranian-Americans and Iranians.[127]

In the updated 2019 PAAIA survey, 15% of Iranian American respondents reported contacting with friends and family in Iran daily, while 26% of respondents communicated with relatives in Iran several times a week. Additionally, 26% of Iranian American respondents contacted with family and friends in Iran several times a month, and 14% communicated with relatives in Iran several times a year. The survey also indicated that 74% of Iranian American respondents preferred contacting their relatives in Iran via phone calls, but communication over mobile communications apps and internet services had increased to 69% and 66% respectively.[125]

As of 2013, U.S. laws require U.S. persons to obtain a license from the U.S. Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) to engage in transactions related to the sale of their personal property in Iran.[128] Similarly, US persons will need a license from OFAC to open a bank account or transfer money to Iran.[129]

Travel to Iran edit

The U.S. government does not have diplomatic or consular relations with the Islamic Republic of Iran and therefore cannot provide protection or routine consular services to U.S. citizens in Iran. The Swiss government, acting through its embassy in Tehran, serves as protecting power for U.S. interests in Iran.[130] The Iranian government does not recognize dual citizenship and will not allow the Swiss to provide protective services for U.S. citizens who are also Iranian nationals. The Iranian authorities make the determination of a dual national's Iranian citizenship without regard to personal wishes.[130] In 2016, the U.S. Department of State warned U.S. citizens of the risks of travel to Iran. In some instances, foreigners, in particular dual nationals of Iran and Western countries including the United States, have been detained or prevented from leaving Iran.[130]

Accomplishments edit

In Los Angeles, Persians have become the largest ethnic group in many Los Angeles' wealthiest enclaves including Bel Air, Beverly Hills, Tarzana, Encino, and Woodland Hills.[131]

The Iranian Revolution resulted in many Iranians fleeing to America in the late 1970s, where, forty years later, Iranian immigrants have become a major force in Silicon Valley as investors, executives, and creators. Iranians have been founders or senior executives at eBay, Oracle, Google, Dropbox, YouTube, Uber, Expedia, Twitter, and other major corporations.[132] After surveying Fortune 500 companies, researchers at Massachusetts Institute of Technology discovered that 50 Iranian-Americans held senior leadership positions at companies with more than $200 million in asset value.[citation needed]

Iranians have the highest percentage of master's degrees than any other ethnic group in the United States.[133] Iranians have also played a large role in the American education system with over 500 Iranian-American professors teaching at top-ranked U.S. universities which include Massachusetts Institute of Technology; Harvard University; Yale University; Princeton University; University of California, Berkeley; University of California, Los Angeles; and Stanford University.[134]

Iranian philanthropists constructed the Freedom Sculpture in the Century City neighborhood, in honor of the Persian artifact Cyrus Cylinder.[135]

Representation edit

Television edit

 
Davar Ardalan, Executive Producer of Audio at National Geographic and longtime journalist at NPR news.

Early Iranian diaspora television has been credited with helping form the local community in the United States.[136] As a result of the Iranian Revolution, the first Iranian American television was formed, and with its formation there were existing political factions that were carried over.[66] The dominant voice in television during this time was from the royalist-support.[66] It was argued by scholar Hamid Naficy, this was not due to political sponsorship, but rather due to market support.[66] Up until 1992, most all Iranian American television programming was in the Farsi language with exceptions to Assyrian and Armenian languages (this included for Iranian-Kurdish and Azeri-specific shows in Farsi).[66][68] Most all programming was non religious, and this was reflecting the population of more minority religions of Los Angeles.[66] There are no reliable statistics on viewership because "Middle Eastern" and Iranian wasn't defined by rating services (such as Nielsen Holdings), however the Los Angeles Times estimated by 1991 the Iranian American population was roughly 800,000 which would indicate the opening of a new share of the television viewing market.[68]

The Long Beach-based independent television station, KSCI-TV dubbed themselves the "international station" and claimed to offer the most diverse ethnic television programming in the early 1980s, including the majority of Iranian American television during this time.[68] Starting on March 15, 1981, the first Iranian diaspora television broadcast show IRTV (acronym for "Iranian television") was created by Ali Limonadi in Los Angeles.[137] Other early Iranian American television programs included Nadar Rafii's Midnight Show;[138] Parviz Sayyad's Parsian TV (on KSCI-TV);[136] Hamid Shabkhiz's Iran;[136] and Manuchehr Bibian's (also known as Manouchehr Bibiyan) Jaam-e-Jam TV channel.[138] Other notables in Iranian American television programs in the 1980s included Shohreh Aqdashlu's Sima va Nava-ye Iran TV; Parviz Kardan's Shahr-e Farang TV; and Hushang Towzi's multiple television series.[139][140][141]

In 2013, BravoTV launched Shahs of Sunset which followed a group of six Iranian American friends in Los Angeles who try to juggle their active social lives and careers while also balancing the demands of their families and traditions; the show was accused of racism and relaying on stereotypes in a petition.[142][143]

In 2020, the television series Taste the Nation with Padma Lakshmi (season 1, episode 6, "Where The Kabob is Hot") focused on Persian food in Los Angeles; where Lakshmi interviewed Bottom of the Pot cookbook author, Naz Deravian; Shamshiri Grill owner, Hamid Mosavi; and comedian, Maz Jobrani.[144][145][146]

Film edit

Iranian Americans have been the focus of film documentaries, including The Iranian Americans (2012; directed by Andrew Goldberg); and Immigration Stories: Iranian Americans of Silicon Valley (2021; directed by Nima Naimi, Alireza Sanayei, Julian Gigola).[147][148][149] Critical response in the HuffPost of The Iranian Americans (2012) PBS documentary included a lack of representation for "interracial marriage".[150]

Fictional films with Iranian American themes include the satire Jimmy Vestvood: Amerikan Hero (2014; directed by Jonathan Kesselman),[151] and Shirin in Love (2014; directed by Ramin Niami).[152] The fictional drama Surviving Paradise (2001), is the first English-language Iranian film with theatrical release in the United States; the storyline is about two Iranian refugees in Los Angeles.[153]

Education edit

The Center for Iranian Diaspora Studies at San Francisco State University, directed and chaired by Persis Karim, was founded in 2017 and was the first program specifically focused on Iranian diaspora (which includes Iranian Americans).[154][155] The center offers grants, fellowships, and scholarships, as well as scholarly lecture series, research, and creative performances.[154][156][157]

Discrimination edit

According to the Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans, nearly half of Iranian-Americans surveyed in 2008 by Zogby International have experienced or personally know Iranian Americans who have experienced discrimination due to their ethnicity, religion, or country of origin. The most common types of discrimination reported are airport security check, social discrimination, racial profiling, employment or business discrimination and discrimination at the hands of immigration officials.[108]

In the United States, Iranians have mistaken as Arabs by the media, government, and public. Many Iranians are known for their pride in their culture and according to the Orange County Register, "nothing annoys Iranian-Americans more than being mistaken for Arabs".[158][159]

In 2009, Martin Kramer, a Harvard professor, warned about the dangers of allowing Iranian Americans to get too close to power during the 2009 American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) conference:[160]

In 2009, Merrill Lynch & Co. agreed to pay $1.55 million to resolve a U.S. government lawsuit accusing the bank of discriminating against an Iranian American employee. The government accused the firm of refusing to promote and later firing this employee on the basis of his national origin and religion.[161]

On 8 September 2015, 22-year-old Iranian American Shayan Mazroei was stabbed to death by white supremacist Craig Tanber. Mazroei, who resided in Laguna Niguel, was a successful businessman operating his own car dealership in Santa Ana. On the night of 8 September 2015, Mazroei began discussing his mother visiting Iran to his girlfriend in a restaurant until Elizabeth Anne Thornburg spat on Mazroei shouting racial slurs. Tanber, who would later be sentenced to life in prison,[162] then proceeded to stab Mazroei resulting in his death.[163][164]

In 2017 in the Kansas City suburb of Olathe, Adam Purinton shot and killed two Indians at a bar, mistaking them for Iranian. While murdering them Puriton yelled "Get out of my country."[165]

In 2018, while on national television, having a discussion about taking a DNA test, Senator Lindsey Graham remarked that it would be "terrible" if he discovered he had Iranian heritage.[166] Graham's statement outraged many high-profile Iranian-Americans, including Omid Kordestani (chairman of Twitter), Ali Partovi and Hadi Partovi (CEOs of Code.org), Pejman Nozad,[167] and British Iranian Christiane Amanpour.[168]

In 2020, the United States Border Patrol instituted a large scale detention of Iranian Americans at the Canadian border without probable cause. While returning to the U.S. from Canada, Americans of Iranian heritage were detained by border officers. Over 60 Americans of Iranian descent were detained and interrogated at the Canadian border. The incident took place during a time of escalated tensions between Iran and the U.S.[169]

Notable people edit

Business and technology edit

Iranian-Americans are among the most educated and successful communities in the U.S., according to a report by the Iranian Studies group at MIT. Iranian-Americans have founded, or hold senior leadership positions at, many major US companies, including Fortune 500 companies such as GE, Intel, Citigroup, Verizon, Motorola, Google, and AT&T.[170] Pierre Omidyar, founder/CEO of eBay is of Iranian origin, as is the founder of Bratz, Isaac Larian. Hamid Biglari is vice-chairman of Citicorp.[171] Bob Miner was the co-founder of Oracle Corporation and the producer of Oracle's relational database management system.[172] In 2006, Anousheh Ansari, co-founder of the Ansari X Prize, became the first female tourist in space. Ansari is also the co-founder and former CEO of Prodea Systems, Inc., and Telecom Technologies, Inc. Other well known Iranian-American entrepreneurs include designer Bijan Pakzad, entrepreneur Sam Nazarian, business executive Hamid Akhavan, former CEO of Unify GmbH & Co. KG (formerly Siemens Enterprise Communications),[173] Omid Kordestani of Twitter and former Senior Vice President of Google, CEO of YouTube Salar Kamangar, Sina Tamaddon of Apple Inc., and Shahram Dabiri Lead Producer for the massively multiplayer online role-playing game (MMORPG) World of Warcraft from 1999 to 2007. Dara Khosrowshahi became CEO of Expedia in August 2005 and then in August 2017, Khosrowshahi became the CEO of Uber, succeeding founder Travis Kalanick. Kam Ghaffarian is the founder of IBX, Axiom Space, Intuitive Machines, and X-energy; he reportedly has a net worth of $2.1 billion.[174]

Philanthropy edit

Many Iranian-Americans are active philanthropists and leaders in improving their community. In 2006, the University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center was the recipient of a $10 million donation from an Iranian-American couple based in Houston, Texas.[175][176] The University of Southern California was the recipient of a $17 million gift from an Iranian-American,[177] as was San Francisco State University which received a $10 million gift from an Iranian-American couple.[178] Chicago's Swedish Covenant Hospital received $4 million;[179] Portland State University, $8 million;[180] and UC Irvine, $30 million.[181][182]

Academia edit

Notable Iranian-Americans in science include Firouz Naderi, a director at NASA; Ali Javan, inventor of the first gas laser; Maryam Mirzakhani, the first female winner of the Fields Medal; Nima Arkani-Hamed, a leading theoretical physicist; cancer biologist Mina J. Bissell; Gholam A. Peyman, the inventor of LASIK; Lotfi Asker Zadeh; Vartan Gregorian; Cumrun Vafa; Babak Hassibi; Nouriel Roubini; Ali Hajimiri; Pardis Sabeti; Vahid Tarokh; Ehsan Afshari; George Bournoutian; Payam Heydari; and Rashid Massumi, M.D., a pioneer in the fields of electrophysiology and cardiology. Prominent Iranian-Americans in American higher education include Rahmat Shoureshi, researcher, professor, and provost of New York Institute of Technology (NYIT) and Nariman Farvardin, president of Stevens Institute of Technology.

Media edit

Well known American media personalities of Iranian descent include Christiane Amanpour of ABC News and CNN, born in England; Daron Malakian, member of the rock band System of a Down;[183] Susie Gharib, of Nightly Business Report; Asieh Namdar; Roya Hakakian; Yara Shahidi; and Rudi Bakhtiar. There are several Iranian American actors, comedians and filmmakers, including the Academy Award nominee and Emmy Award winner Shohreh Aghdashloo, the award-winning director, producer and screenwriters Amir Cyrus Ahanchian and Cyrus Nowrasteh, actresses Tala Ashe, Catherine Bell, Sarah Shahi, Nadia Bjorlin, Nasim Pedrad, Desiree Akhavan, Sheila Vand, Necar Zadegan, Medalion Rahimi, and Bahar Soomekh, actors Adrian Pasdar, Shaun Toub, Arian Moayed, Navid Negahban, Reza Sixo Safai, Shahaub Roudbari, and Aria Shahghasemi, musicians Sarah Fard (Savoir Faire)[184] and Rostam Batmanglij, comedians Max Amini, Maz Jobrani and Tehran Von Ghasri, filmmakers Bavand Karim and Kamshad Kooshan, producers Bob Yari and Farhad Safinia, author and performer Shahram Shiva, and artist and filmmaker Daryush Shokof. Notable children's media writer/director Shabnam Rezaei has created several children's TV series on Hulu and PBSKids. There are also notable American YouTube personalities of Iranian descent, including JonTron.

Sports edit

Professional tennis player Andre Agassi, NFL football players T. J. Houshmandzadeh, David Bakhtiari and Shar Pourdanesh, professional wrestlers Shawn Daivari and The Iron Sheik, professional mixed martial artist Amir Sadollah, professional soccer players Alecko Eskandarian and Steven Beitashour and professional soccer coach Afshin Ghotbi.

Politics edit

The son of the late Shah of Iran, Reza Pahlavi, as well as several high-ranking officials in the Shah's administration, such as Hushang Ansary and Jamshid Amouzegar live or have lived in the United States. Goli Ameri is the Under Secretary General for Humanitarian Affairs of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies, as well as the former U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs from 2008 to 2009, during which she was the highest-ranking Iranian-American public official in the United States. Drug policy expert Kevin Sabet is Iranian-American and the only person to serve as an appointee in the drug czar's office of George W. Bush and Barack Obama. Beverly Hills elected its first Iranian-born Mayor, Jimmy Delshad, in 2007.[185][186] Bob Yousefian served as the mayor of Glendale, California from 2004 to 2005. In November 2011, Anna M. Kaplan was elected Councilwoman in the Town of North Hempstead, New York, becoming the first Iranian-American to be elected to a major municipal office in New York State.[187] Cyrus Amir-Mokri, who was appointed as the Treasury Department Assistant Secretary for Financial Institutions by President Obama, is the highest ranking Iranian-American official in government as of 2012.[188] In November 2012, Cyrus Habib of Washington state and Adrin Nazarian of California became the first Iranian-Americans elected to state legislatures. Habib is now the Lieutenant Governor of Washington and the first Iranian-American elected to any statewide office. Champaign County (Ohio) elected Fereidoun Shokouhi to the public office of Champaign County Engineer in 1995. He served until his retirement in 2012. Following the 2020 United States House of Representatives elections, Oklahoma Rep. Stephanie Bice became the first Iranian American elected to Congress.[189]

Azadeh Shahshahani is a human rights attorney based in Atlanta and is a former president of the National Lawyers Guild.[190]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b c U.S. Census Bureau (2011 American Community Survey 1-Year Estimates). Retrieved 7 January 2016.
  2. ^ "How many Iranians are in the U.S.A?". Shargh Newspaper (in Persian). Entekhab Professional News Site. 20 May 2012. Retrieved 11 April 2017.
  3. ^ "Revealing of the number of Iranians in the outside Iran". Hafte Sobh Newspaper (in Persian). Bartarinha News Portal. 9 September 2012. Retrieved 11 April 2017.
  4. ^ a b "Iranian National Organization for Civil Registration: More than 2 million Iranians live in the U.S.A and the U.A.E" (in Persian). Radio Farda. 7 September 2012. Retrieved 11 April 2017.
  5. ^ "IRANIAN COMMUNITY USA". Organization of Iranian American Communities. OIAC. Retrieved 8 March 2023.
  6. ^ Alvarado, Monsy (20 March 2014). . North Jersey Media Group. Archived from the original on 22 March 2014. Retrieved 21 March 2014.
  7. ^ a b c Fata, Soraya; Rafii, Raha (September 2003). (PDF). National Iranian American Council. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 January 2019. Retrieved 12 January 2016.
  8. ^ Vandenberge, Jordan (3 January 2020). "Iranian-Americans in Cleveland keeping close eye on rising tensions between US, Iran". WEWS-TV. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  9. ^ a b c d e (PDF). paaia.org. 2012. p. 14. Archived from the original (PDF) on 25 July 2012. Retrieved 12 February 2019.
  10. ^ a b c d e f "Migration Information Source – Spotlight on the Iranian Foreign Born". Migrationinformation.org. June 2006. Retrieved 15 February 2010.
  11. ^ a b "Iranian-Americans Reported Among Most Highly Educated in U.S." Payvand.com. 24 November 2006. Retrieved 15 February 2010.
  12. ^ Ansari, Azadeh (16 June 2009). "Iranian-Americans cast ballots on Iran's future". CNN. Retrieved 15 February 2010.
  13. ^ Etehad, Melissa (4 February 2019). "They can't go back to Iran. So L.A. Persians built 'Tehrangeles' and made it their own". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 3 October 2019.
  14. ^ a b (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 June 2021. Retrieved 6 June 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)[dead link]
  15. ^ a b c McIntosh, Phyllis. "Iranian-Americans Reported Among Most Highly Educated in U.S.: Iranian-Americans also contribute substantially to the U.S. economy". State Department Bureau of International Information Programs. Retrieved 12 January 2016.
  16. ^ a b Amirani, Shoku (29 September 2012). "Tehrangeles: How Iranians made part of LA their own". BBC News. BBC. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  17. ^ a b c Daha, Maryam (September 2011). "Contextual Factors Contributing to Ethnic Identity Development of Second-Generation Iranian American Adolescents". Journal of Adolescent Research. 26 (5): 543–569. doi:10.1177/0743558411402335. S2CID 146592244. ... the majority of the participants self-identified themselves as Persian instead of Iranian, due to the stereotypes and negative portrayals of Iranians in the media and politics. Adolescents from Jewish and Baha'i faiths asserted their religious identity more than their ethnic identity. The fact Iranians use Persian interchangeably is nothing to do with current Iranian government because the name Iran was used before this period as well. Linguistically modern Persian is a branch of Old Persian in the family of Indo-European languages and that includes all the minorities as well more inclusively.
  18. ^ Nakamura, Raymond M. (2003). Health in America: A Multicultural Perspective. Kendall/Hunt Pub. p. 31. ISBN 978-0-7575-0637-6. Iranian/Persian Americans – The flow of Iranian citizens into the United States began in 1979, during and after the Islamic Revolution.
  19. ^ Zanger, Mark (2001). The American Ethnic Cookbook for Students. ABC-CLIO. p. 213. ISBN 978-1-57356-345-1.
  20. ^ Racial and Ethnic Relations in America, Carl Leon Bankston,"Therefore, Turkish and Iranian (Persian) Americans, who are Muslims but not ethnically Arabs, are often mistakenly..", Salem Press, 2000
  21. ^ Darya, Fereshteh Haeri (2007). Second-generation Iranian-Americans: The Relationship Between Ethnic Identity, Acculturation, and Psychological Well-being. pp. 3–4. ISBN 978-0-542-97374-1. According to previous studies, the presence of heterogeneity is evident among Iranian immigrants (also known as Persians – Iran was known as Persia until 1935) who came from myriads of religious (Muslim, Christian, Jewish, Armenian, Assyrian, Baha'i and Zoroastrian), ethnic (Turk, Kurds, Baluchs, Lurs, Turkamans, Arabs, as well as tribes such as Ghasghaie, and Bakhtiari), linguistic/dialogic background (Persian, Azari, Gialki, Mazandarani, Kurdish, Arabic, and others). Cultural, religious and political, and various other differences among Iranians reflect their diverse social and interpersonal interactions. Some studies suggest that, despite the existence of subgroup within Iranian immigrants (e.g. various ethno-religious groups), their nationality as Iranians has been an important point of reference and identifiable source of their identification as a group across time and setting.
  22. ^ Yarshater, Ehsan Persia or Iran, Persian or Farsi 24 October 2010 at the Wayback Machine, Iranian Studies, vol. XXII no. 1 (1989)
  23. ^ Majd, Hooman, The Ayatollah Begs to Differ: The Paradox of Modern Iran, by Hooman Majd, Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group, 23 September 2008, ISBN 0385528426, 9780385528429. p. 161
  24. ^ Frye, Richard Nelson (2005). Greater Iran: A 20th-century Odyssey. Mazda. ISBN 9781568591773. Retrieved 21 December 2016.
  25. ^ a b c d Bozorgmehr, Mehdi (2009). "Iran". In Mary C. Waters; Reed Ueda; Helen B. Marrow (eds.). The New Americans: A Guide to Immigration since 1965. Harvard University Press. p. 469. ISBN 978-0-674-04493-7.
  26. ^ Cornell, Svante E. (20 May 2015). Azerbaijan Since Independence. Routledge. p. 7. ISBN 978-1-317-47621-4.
  27. ^ West, Barbara A. (1 January 2009). Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Asia and Oceania. Infobase Publishing. p. 68. ISBN 978-1-4381-1913-7.
  28. ^ Minahan, James (1 January 2002). Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations: S-Z. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 1766. ISBN 978-0-313-32384-3.
  29. ^ Elizabeth Chacko, Contemporary ethnic geographies in America // Ines M. Miyares, Christopher A. Airriess (eds.), Rowman & Littlefield, 2007, pp. 325–326
  30. ^ "Collins English Dictionary – Complete & Unabridged 11th Edition". Collinsdictionary.com. Retrieved 4 September 2012.
  31. ^ "Definition of "Persian"". Collins English Dictionary. Retrieved 12 January 2016.
  32. ^ Bakalian 1993, p. 33.
  33. ^ Papazian, Dennis (2000). . Journal of Eastern Christian Studies. 52 (3–4): 311–347. doi:10.2143/JECS.52.3.565605. Archived from the original on 29 October 2014. Retrieved 29 August 2018.
  34. ^ a b "The First Iranian American". Paaia. Retrieved 25 April 2015.
  35. ^ a b c d e f g Bayor 2011, p. 1076.
  36. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q (PDF). PAAIA (Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans). Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 7 January 2016.
  37. ^ Bozorgmehr & Sabagh, p. 8
  38. ^ a b Bayor 2011, p. 1077.
  39. ^ Torbat, Akbar E (Spring 2002). "The brain drain from Iran to the United States". Middle East Journal 56 (2): 272–295.
  40. ^ a b Hakimzadeh, Shirin; Dixon, David (1 June 2006). "Spotlight on the Iranian Foreign Born Migration Information". Migration Policy Institute. Retrieved 15 February 2010. The exiles were disproportionately members of religious and ethnic minorities, such as the Bahai'is, Jews, Armenians, and Assyrians. Also in the second wave were young men who fled military service and the Iran–Iraq war, followed by young women and families who came for educational and political reasons.
  41. ^ "1980 US Census; No 48. Population by Selected Ancestry Group and Region" (PDF). United States Census Bureau. 1980. p. 42. Retrieved 16 January 2016.
  42. ^ Malekzadeh, Shervin (10 December 2019). "What It Means to Be Iranian in America". Foreign Affairs: America and the World. ISSN 0015-7120. Retrieved 2 November 2020.
  43. ^ Bayor 2011, p. 1078.
  44. ^ "Profile of Selected Demographic and Social Characteristics: 2000 Population Universe; People Born in Iran" (PDF). United States Census Bureau. Retrieved 15 January 2016.
  45. ^ a b Ancestry: 2000. United States Census Bureau. Retrieved 17 December 2012.
  46. ^ a b c d Bahareh H. Lampert. Voices of New American Women: Visions of Home in the Middle Eastern Diasporic Imagination page 50, 2008. ISBN 978-0-549-63520-8
  47. ^ a b Katzman, Kenneth (29 December 2015). "Iran, Gulf Security, and U.S. P olicy" (PDF). Congressional Research Service Report. Retrieved 7 January 2016.
  48. ^ a b Paul Harvey, Edward Blum. The Columbia Guide to Religion in American History page 368. Columbia University Press, 14 February 2012. ISBN 978-0-231-14020-1
  49. ^ a b Reinl, James. "Iranian Americans bank on historic nuclear deal". Al-Jazeera. Retrieved 7 January 2016.
  50. ^ a b Yeganeh, Torbati. "Iranian-Americans forge a rare bond to support nuclear deal". Reuters. Retrieved 7 January 2016.
  51. ^ "PAAIA – Demographics & Statistics". Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans. Retrieved 16 January 2016.
  52. ^ a b Ronald H. Bayor. Multicultural America: An Encyclopedia of the Newest Americans ABC-CLIO, 2011 ISBN 978-0-313-35787-9. page 1080
  53. ^ a b Esfandiari, Golnaz. "The U.S. Election's Iranian-American Vote: What's It Look Like?". The Atlantic. Retrieved 7 January 2016.
  54. ^ a b Fata, Soraya; Rafii, Raha (September 2003). (PDF). National Iranian American Council (Report). p. 4. Archived from the original (PDF) on 15 February 2020. Retrieved 20 March 2022.
  55. ^ The numbers are partially based on p.37 of The Iranian Diaspora: Challenges, Negotiations, and Transformations by M. Mobasher. University of Texas Press, 2018. ISBN 1477316647
  56. ^ "Community Facts". United States Census Bureau. Retrieved 29 January 2018.
  57. ^ The Iranians Count Census Coalition Releases the Special Tabulation Results from the 2010 U.S. Census. Payvand.com.
  58. ^ "Iranian Studies Group".
  59. ^ "آمار پراکندگی ایرانیان مقیم خارج از کشور + نمودار".
  60. ^ Iranian-Americans and the 2010 Census: Did We Shrink?, by Hossein Hosseini. Payvand.com.
  61. ^ Kessler, James S. (2005). "Iranians". Encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org. Retrieved 12 January 2016.
  62. ^ . ePodunk. Archived from the original on 12 April 2018. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  63. ^ "Iranian-Americans gain political clout in Great Neck peninsula as demographics shift". Newsday.
  64. ^ a b c Ansari, Azadeh (16 June 2009). "Iranian-Americans cast ballots on Iran's future". CNN. Retrieved 15 February 2010.
  65. ^ The Wall Street Journal, Iran's Political Crisis Fuels Expatriates' Fears, Hopes
  66. ^ a b c d e f g h Hassanpour, Amir (1996). "Review of The Making of Exile Cultures: Iranian Television in Los Angeles". Iranian Studies. 29 (3/4): 378–381. doi:10.1017/S0021086200010847. ISSN 0021-0862. JSTOR 4311007. S2CID 245655342.
  67. ^ . The Sunday Telegraph. London. 4 June 2006. Archived from the original on 26 February 2008. Retrieved 5 May 2010.
  68. ^ a b c d Naficy, Hamid (1993). "From Broadcasting to Narrowcasting: Middle Eastern Diaspora in Los Angeles". Middle East Report (180): 31–34. doi:10.2307/3013230. ISSN 0899-2851. JSTOR 3013230 – via JSTOR.
  69. ^ Bakalian 1993, p. 16.
  70. ^ Universe: Total population more information 2006–2010 American Community Survey 5-Year Estimates Archived 12 February 2020 at archive.today. factfinder2.census.gov
  71. ^ Los Angeles Times, Irvine embraces diversity at the polls, 9 November 2008.
  72. ^ a b "2011 Language Mapper".
  73. ^ "Tarzana". Mapping L.A.
  74. ^ "MAPPING L.A. Neighborhoods". LA Times.
  75. ^ Osborne, Lawrence. "Iranians settle on Girard Avenue to show carpets". San Diego Reader.
  76. ^ "Mayor makes history". Daily News. 27 March 2007.
  77. ^ Mobasher M. Iranians in Texas: Migration, Politics, and Ethnic Identity. University of Texas Press, 2012. ISBN 0292742827
  78. ^ Cook, Alison (15 September 1994). "Touring Little Persia". Houston Press. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  79. ^ Cook, Allison. "Touring Little Persia," Houston Press. 15 September 1994. p. 1. Retrieved on 12 May 2014.
  80. ^ Fischer and Abedi, p. 269.
  81. ^ Rustomji, p. 249.
  82. ^ Karkabi, Barbara. "Bahai Faith adherents value unity, education." Houston Chronicle. 11 November 2006. Houston Belief. Retrieved on 3 May 2014.
  83. ^ Shellnutt, Kate. "Local Baha'is pray for jailed leaders in Iran 3 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine," Houston Chronicle, 8 February 2010. Retrieved on 3 May 2014.
  84. ^ "This aircraft carrier skipper fled Iran as a child. Now he's preparing to deploy amid heightened tensions".
  85. ^ "Founders". Art of the Islamic World at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  86. ^ "A$1 Million Gift Plus $4 Million in Jewelry and a Horde of Priceless Persian Art? This Islamic Worlds Affair is the Richest Gala Ever". 22 November 2017.
  87. ^ "Story | Bush Library 20th Anniversary Exhibit | Lead by Example".
  88. ^ "George H.W. Bush Library Center".
  89. ^ Kriel, Lomi (6 August 2012). "Still no answers 6 months after Iranian student's killing". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 10 September 2018.
  90. ^ Rogers, Brian (14 August 2018). "Jury delivers death sentence for Jordanian immigrant convicted of two Houston-area 'honor killings'". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 9 September 2018.
  91. ^ "TANGLED WEB: Sorting out the timeline of the so-called Houston 'honor killings'". KTRK-TV. 25 June 2018. Retrieved 9 September 2018.
  92. ^ Rogers, Brian (18 June 2018). "Wife testifies her husband confessed to pulling the trigger in one of two Houston-area 'honor killings'". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 9 September 2018.
  93. ^ "Iranian community in North Texas" (PDF). Texas Baptists: Intercultural Ministry. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
  94. ^ "Trump administration opposes military intervention in Iran". 21 April 2019.
  95. ^ "Pompeo privately said Trump administration will not pursue military intervention in Iran: Report". 21 April 2019.
  96. ^ "Iranian refugees seeking to settle in San Antonio have detoured into limbo". 4 March 2018.
  97. ^ "'We are not others': San Antonio is their home". 2 July 2016.
  98. ^ . 14 February 2008. Archived from the original on 14 February 2008.
  99. ^ Multicultural America: A Multimedia Encyclopedia, Volume 1. SAGE Publications. 2013. ISBN 9781452276267.
  100. ^ "Islam gains about as many converts as it loses in U.S".
  101. ^ (PDF). PAAIA. December 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 21 December 2008.
  102. ^ . NPR. 13 January 2013. Archived from the original on 15 January 2013.
  103. ^ Social Movements in 20th Century Iran: Culture, Ideology, and Mobilizing Frameworks. Lexington Books. 2005. ISBN 9780739117576.
  104. ^ Mostofi, Nilou (2003). "Who We Are: The Perplexity of Iranian-American Identity". The Sociological Quarterly. 44 (4): 681–703. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.618.7415. doi:10.1111/j.1533-8525.2003.tb00531.x. JSTOR 4120728. S2CID 145195478.
  105. ^ Mobasher, Mohsen (1 September 2006). "Cultural Trauma and Ethnic Identity Formation Among Iranian Immigrants in the United States". American Behavioral Scientist. 50: 100–117. doi:10.1177/0002764206289656. S2CID 145633929.
  106. ^ . Web.mit.edu. Archived from the original on 25 November 2011. Retrieved 28 November 2011.
  107. ^ "Obama administration granted citizenship to 2,500 Iranians during nuclear deal: Iran official". Fox News. 28 June 2018.
  108. ^ a b c d e (PDF). PAAIA. December 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 12 January 2016.
  109. ^ PAAIA Releases 2011 National Survey of Iranian Americans. Payvand.com (7 December 2011).
  110. ^ Ariosto, David (21 July 2008). "Iranian-American youth struggle to define themselves". CNN. Retrieved 13 June 2019.
  111. ^ "Tina Pak: From Tehran to Camp Ayandeh". Payvand.com. Retrieved 13 June 2019.
  112. ^ a b Bayor 2011, p. 1081.
  113. ^ Sabagh, Bozorgmehr & Der-Martirosian 1990, p. 9.
  114. ^ Reinhold, Robert (21 March 1988). "Echoes From Armenia in Southern California". The New York Times. Retrieved 3 December 2012.
  115. ^ Parks, Lisa; Kumar, Shanti (2003). Planet TV: a global television reader. New York: New York University Press. p. 395. ISBN 978-0-8147-6692-7.
  116. ^ Samkian 2007, p. 102.
  117. ^ "SBA Report: Iranian-Americans with one of highest rates of immigrant-owned businesses". Payvand.com. 22 November 2006. Retrieved 15 February 2010.
  118. ^ (PDF). Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans. December 2008. Archived from the original (PDF) on 5 March 2009. Retrieved 20 March 2022.
  119. ^ 39. Ronaghy HA, Williams KN, Baker TD, Emigration of Iranian Physicians to the United States, A Ten-Year Follow-up of Graduates of Shiraz Medical School. Pahlavi Med J. 1973; 4:174–193.
  120. ^ Ronaghy HA, Shajari A, Islamic Revolution and Physician Migration Archive of Iranian Medicine 2013; 16: 10
  121. ^ Ronaghy HA, Cahill K Baker TD, Physician Migration to the United States: One Country's Transfusion is Another Country's Hemorrhage. J Am Med Assoc. 1974: 227: 538–542
  122. ^ McIntosh, Phyllis. "Iranian-Americans Reported Among Most Highly Educated in U.S." IIP Digital. State Department's Bureau of International Information Programs. Retrieved 25 April 2015.
  123. ^ Bahrampour, Tara (3 November 2003). "Persia on the Pacific". The New Yorker.
  124. ^ "The Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans National Opinion Survey 2019" (PDF). PAAIA. August 2019. Retrieved 7 December 2020
  125. ^ a b c d "The Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans National Opinion Survey 2019" (PDF). PAAIA. August 2019. Retrieved 7 December 2020.
  126. ^ Executive Order 13769 of January 27, 2017: Protecting the Nation From Foreign Terrorist Entry Into the United States. Executive Office of the President. 82 FR 8977–8982. February 1, 2017.
  127. ^ a b "PAAIA Releases 2009 National Survey of Iranian Americans". Payvand.com. Retrieved 15 February 2010.
  128. ^ Alavi, Farhad R. (31 December 2010). "How U.S. Laws Can Affect Your Personal Affairs in Iran". Payvand.com. Retrieved 12 January 2016.
  129. ^ Cullis, Tyler (4 April 2014). "Banks Targeting Iranian Americans – What Are Your Rights?". Payvand.com. Retrieved 12 January 2016.
  130. ^ a b c "Iran Travel Warning". travel.state.gov. Retrieved 19 December 2016.   This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  131. ^ "Mapping LA Neighborhoods". Los Angeles Times.
  132. ^ Peisner, David (23 October 2018). "How Dara Khosrowshahi's Iranian heritage shapes how he leads Uber". Fast Company.
  133. ^ Brin, Stan. "Persian POWER".
  134. ^ "MIT: Iranian-Americans Among Most Highly Educated in U.S. and contribute substantially to the U.S. economy".
  135. ^ Chiland, Elijah (5 July 2017). "Century City Freedom Sculpture unveiled on Santa Monica Boulevard median". Curbed.
  136. ^ a b c Parks, Lisa; Kumar, Shanti (2003). Planet TV: A Global Television Reader. NYU Press. pp. 385, 400. ISBN 978-0-8147-6691-0.
  137. ^ Bagherpour, Amir (12 September 2010). "The Iranian Diaspora in America: 30 Years in the Making". Frontline. PBS, KQED. Retrieved 9 February 2022.
  138. ^ a b Naficy, Hamid (16 September 2011). A Social History of Iranian Cinema, Volume 1: The Artisanal Era, 1897-1941. Duke University Press. p. 57. ISBN 978-0-8223-4775-0.
  139. ^ Naficy, Hamid (1 January 1993). The Making of Exile Cultures: Iranian Television in Los Angeles. University of Minnesota Press. p. 242. ISBN 978-0-8166-2084-5.
  140. ^ Tabatabai, Behzad (2021). "The Passing of Parviz Kardan, a pioneer of Iranian stage, screen and t". farhang.org. Farhang Foundation. Retrieved 9 February 2022.
  141. ^ Gustave E. von Grunebaum Center for Near Eastern Studies (1 January 1993). Irangeles: Iranians in Los Angeles. University of California Press. p. 363. ISBN 978-0-520-08008-9. Retrieved 20 March 2022.
  142. ^ Piazza, Jo (26 March 2015). "Iranian-American petitioners call Bravo's 'The Shahs of Sunset' racist". Fox News. Retrieved 25 March 2022.
  143. ^ Maghbouleh, Neda (1 December 2012). ""Shahs of Sunset": The real Iranians of Los Angeles?". Salon. Retrieved 25 March 2022.
  144. ^ Stueven, Michele (16 June 2020). "Trailer: Padma Lakshmi Explores L.A.'s Persian Square in "Taste The Nation," June 18 on Hulu". LA Weekly. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
  145. ^ "Padma Lakshmi's new show is a celebration of immigrants' lives and food in US". KCRW. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
  146. ^ Chron, Emma Balter (26 June 2020). "What is American food? Padma Lakshmi's new show 'Taste the Nation' offers answers". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
  147. ^ Wiegand, David (15 December 2012). "'The Iranian Americans' review: It's a start". SFGATE. Retrieved 4 February 2022.
  148. ^ "The Iranian Americans". KPBS Public Media. 7 January 2013. Retrieved 4 February 2022.
  149. ^ "Film screening: Immigrant Stories: Iranian-Americans of Silicon Valley". Iranian Studies, Stanford University. Retrieved 4 February 2022.
  150. ^ "Feelings of Marginalization by the PBS Documentary, 'Iranian-Americans'". HuffPost. 3 January 2013. Retrieved 4 February 2022.
  151. ^ Kompanek, Christopher (12 May 2016). . The Washington Post. Archived from the original on 1 December 2017. Retrieved 4 February 2022.
  152. ^ "Shirin in Love: Film Review". The Hollywood Reporter. 13 March 2014. Retrieved 4 February 2022.
  153. ^ Hagopian, Kevin. "How Iranian filmmakers like Asghar Farhadi defy the censors". The Conversation. Retrieved 4 February 2022.
  154. ^ a b Trent, Paisley. "Center for Iranian Diaspora Studies hopes to expand with $1 million donation". Golden Gate Xpress. Retrieved 4 February 2022.
  155. ^ Shirazi, Ziba; Afary, Kamran (15 June 2020). Iranian Diaspora Identities: Stories and Songs. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-7618-7171-2.
  156. ^ "Bilingual Lecture Series on Iran educates, connects Iranian diaspora". Daily Bruin. 16 November 2021. Retrieved 4 February 2022.
  157. ^ Mojadad, Ida (21 March 2019). "We Are Here, We Have Always Been Here". SF Weekly. Retrieved 4 February 2022.
  158. ^ Brin, Stan (8 July 2004). . OC Metro. Archived from the original on 28 March 2015.
  159. ^ "Myth vs. Fact: Persians and Arabs". American Iranian Council. 2 November 2016.
  160. ^ Disney, Patrick (26 March 2010). "Amanpour is Being Attacked Because She's Iranian". Payvand News.
  161. ^ "Merrill Lynch to Pay $1.55 Million for Job Bias Against Former Iranian Worker". PAAIA. 31 December 2008. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
  162. ^ Fausto, Alma; Emrey, Sean (8 February 2020). "White supremacist who fatally stabbed Iranian-American man at California bar gets 56 years to life". Orange County Register. Retrieved 5 October 2020.
  163. ^ Yee, Christopher (11 September 2015). "Laguna Niguel man slain in bar stabbing remembered as 'old soul'". Orange County Register. Retrieved 5 October 2020.
  164. ^ Ludwig, Ashley (6 September 2018). "Woman Charged As Accessory To Murder Of Shayan Mazroei". Los Alamitos-Seal Beach, CA Patch. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
  165. ^ "Suspect apparently thought he shot 'Iranian people' in Kansas bar attack that killed Indian man". Los Angeles Times. 28 February 2017.
  166. ^ Watkins, Eli (16 October 2018). "Graham says it would be 'terrible' if DNA showed he has Iranian heritage". CNN.
  167. ^ O'Brien, Sara Ashley (17 October 2018). "Tech execs want Senator Graham to apologize over Iranian remark". CNN.
  168. ^ Esfandiari, Golnaz (18 October 2018). "Iranian-Americans Call Out U.S. Senator Graham For 'Terrible' Ancestry Gaffe". Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. Retrieved 3 May 2019.
  169. ^ Baker, Mike (5 January 2020). "U.S. Stops Dozens of Iranian-Americans Returning From Canada". The New York Times. Retrieved 13 February 2020.
  170. ^ "Iranian Studies Group at MIT". Isg-mit.org. Retrieved 15 February 2010.
  171. ^ . Pbs Socal. 2015. Archived from the original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 12 January 2016.
  172. ^ "30th Anniversary corporate document: 1970s Defying Conventional Wisdom" (PDF). Oracle Corporation. 26 May 2007. p. 1. Retrieved 29 February 2016.
  173. ^ "Leadership Team". 1 November 2013.
  174. ^ "Forbes list: Southwest Florida has a new billionaire, others move up". Naples Daily News. Retrieved 8 April 2023.
  175. ^ "Profile of an Iranian-American philanthropist: Ali Saberioon". Payvand.com. Retrieved 28 November 2011.
  176. ^ . Mdanderson.org. 22 April 2009. Archived from the original on 13 December 2007. Retrieved 28 November 2011.
  177. ^ Mankin, Eric (23 November 2011). . Usc.edu. Archived from the original on 10 December 2011. Retrieved 28 November 2011.
  178. ^ "SF State News". Sfsu.edu. 1 June 2005. Retrieved 28 November 2011.
  179. ^ "Archive Pages". Iranian.com. 9 April 2007. Retrieved 28 November 2011.
  180. ^ . Portland State Maseeh College of Engineering & Computer Science. 2004. Archived from the original on 26 August 2007.
  181. ^ . Merage.uci.edu. Archived from the original on 26 February 2008. Retrieved 28 November 2011.
  182. ^ "Archive Pages". Iranian.com. 24 April 2005. Retrieved 28 November 2011.
  183. ^ Gowing, Liam (2 March 2006). "In later years he moved Memphis, Tennessee to pursue his music career. However this was unsuccessful. His son has got him covered: System of a Down's artist of choice is Vartan Malakian, the guitarist's dad". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 27 July 2010.
  184. ^ "Savoir Faire Music Boston". savoirfaireband. Retrieved 1 August 2021.
  185. ^ "Living in Tehrangeles: L.A.'s Iranian Community". NPR.org. NPR. Retrieved 28 November 2011.
  186. ^ Kasindorf, Martin (14 March 2007). . USA Today. Archived from the original on 6 October 2008. Retrieved 5 May 2010.
  187. ^ Zendrian, Alexandra (9 November 2011). . Portwashington.patch.com. Archived from the original on 24 April 2012. Retrieved 28 November 2011.
  188. ^ White House Hosts Iranian-American Community Leaders for Roundtable Discussion. Payvand.com.
  189. ^ . www.iranianamericanpac.org. Archived from the original on 4 December 2020. Retrieved 12 November 2020.
  190. ^ Journal, A. B. A. "Meet 3 female human rights lawyers fighting for change worldwide". ABA Journal.

Sources edit

  • Bakalian, Anny (1993). Armenian Americans: From Being to Feeling Armenian. New Brunswick, New Jersey: Transaction Publishers. ISBN 978-1-56000-025-9.
  • Bayor, Ronald H. (2011). Multicultural America: An Encyclopedia of the Newest Americans. ABC-CLIO. ISBN 978-0-313-35787-9.
  • Bozorgmehr, Mehdi., Sabagh, Georges (1988). High Status Immigrants: A Statistical Profile of Iranians in the United States, Iranian Studies.
  • Sabagh, Georges; Bozorgmehr, Mehdi; Der-Martirosian, Claudia (1990). Subethnicity: Armenians in Los Angeles. Institute for Social Science Research, University of California Los Angeles.
  • Samkian, Artineh (2007). Constructing Identities, Perceiving Lives: Armenian High School Students' Perceptions of Identity and Education. ISBN 978-0-549-48257-4.

Further reading edit

  • Hollie, Pamela G. (9 December 1979). "Iranian Immigrants, Totaling Perhaps a Million, Bring Wealth and Diversity to the U.S.; Perhaps a Million in the U.S." The New York Times. p. 16. ISSN 0362-4331.
  • Ansari, Maboud (1993). The Making of the Iranian Community in America. Pardis Press. ISBN 978-0963260000.
  • Kelley, Ron; Friedlander, Jonathan; Colby, Anita, eds. (1993). Irangeles: Iranians in Los Angeles. Gustave E. von Grunebaum Center for Near Eastern Studies and International Studies and Overseas Programs at University of California, Los Angeles. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520080089.
  • Nigem, Elias T. (Summer 1994). "The Making of the Iranian Community in America". International Migration Review. SAGE Publications, Inc. 28 (2) – via Gale Academic OneFile.
  • Farnia, Nina (1 August 2011). "Law's Inhumanities: Peripheral Racialization and the Early Development of an Iranian Race". Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East. 31 (2): 455–473. doi:10.1215/1089201X-1264352. S2CID 143607791.
  • "Iranian Americans." Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America, edited by Thomas Riggs, (3rd ed., vol. 2, Gale, 2014), pp. 433–443. Online
  • Nanquette, Laetitia (2016). "Translations of modern Persian literature in the United States: 1979–2011". The Translator. 23 (1): 49–66. doi:10.1080/13556509.2016.1227530. S2CID 152171897.
  • Maghbouleh, Neda (2017). The Limits of Whiteness: Iranian Americans and the Everyday Politics of Race. Stanford University Press. ISBN 9781503603370.
  • Yaghoobi, Claudia (2021). "Racial Profiling of Iranian Armenians in the United States: Omid Fallahazad's "Citizen Vartgez"". Iran Namag. 6 (2).

External links edit

  • Iranian-American Organizations – comprehensive list
  • Iranian-American workers by occupation, 2009, New York Times
  • Iran Census Report (2003): Strength in Numbers 5 January 2019 at the Wayback Machine – The Relative Concentration of Iranian Americans Across the United States
  • Fact-sheet on the Iranian-American Community (ISG MIT)
  • Migration Information Source – Spotlight on the Iranian Foreign Born
  • Interest Section of the Islamic Republic of Iran in Washington D.C. 20 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine – Consular affairs; videos

iranian, americans, citizens, nationals, united, states, iranian, ancestry, among, most, highly, educated, people, united, states, they, have, historically, excelled, business, academia, science, arts, entertainment, many, have, become, doctors, engineers, law. Iranian Americans are citizens or nationals of the United States who are of Iranian ancestry Iranian Americans are among the most highly educated people in the United States 10 11 They have historically excelled in business academia science the arts and entertainment Many have become doctors engineers lawyers and tech entrepreneurs 12 13 Iranian Americansایرانیان آمریکاIranian American population by stateTotal population470 341 ACS 2011 1 500 000 1 500 000 other estimates 2 3 4 5 See also Iranian diasporaRegions with significant populationsCalifornia largest populations in Los Angeles Orange and San Diego counties New York New Jersey 6 Texas Connecticut Maryland Virginia Washington D C Illinois Michigan 7 Northeast Ohio 8 Florida GeorgiaLanguagesAmerican English As well native Persian Azerbaijani Armenian Kurdish and other languages of Iran ReligionIslam 31 Atheism Realism Humanism 11 Agnosticism 8 Bahaʼi 7 Judaism 5 Protestanism 5 Roman Catholicism 2 Zoroastrianism 2 Other 15 including Mandaeanism and No Response 15 9 a a A 2012 national telephone survey of a sample of 400 Iranian Americans in the Los Angeles area commissioned by the Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans and conducted by Zogby Research Services asked the respondents what their religions were The survey had a cooperation rate of 31 2 Most Iranian Americans arrived in the United States after 1979 as a result of the Iranian Revolution and the fall of the Persian monarchy with over 40 settling in California specifically Los Angeles Unable to return to Iran they have created many distinct ethnic enclaves such as the Los Angeles Tehrangeles community in Westwood Los Angeles Based on a 2012 announcement by the National Organization for Civil Registration an organization of the Ministry of Interior of Iran the United States has the greatest number of Iranians outside the country 4 14 Research by the Iranian Studies Group at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology in 2004 estimated the number of Iranian Americans at 691 000 about half of which live in the US state of California 10 15 16 Contents 1 Terminology 2 History 2 1 Early history 2 2 First phase of emigration 2 3 Second phase 2 4 Contemporary period 3 Demographics 3 1 Population 3 1 1 Significant Persian population centers 3 1 1 1 California 3 1 1 2 Texas 3 2 Religion 3 3 Ethnicity 3 4 Citizenship 4 Integration 4 1 Community Outreach 4 2 Education 4 3 Occupations and income 4 3 1 Physicians 5 Politics 6 Ties to Iran 6 1 Travel to Iran 7 Accomplishments 8 Representation 8 1 Television 8 2 Film 8 3 Education 9 Discrimination 10 Notable people 10 1 Business and technology 10 2 Philanthropy 10 3 Academia 10 4 Media 10 5 Sports 10 6 Politics 11 See also 12 References 13 Sources 14 Further reading 15 External linksTerminology edit Iranian American is sometimes used interchangeably with Persian American 17 18 19 20 partly due to the fact that in the Western world Iran was known as Persia 21 On the Nowruz of 1935 Reza Shah Pahlavi asked foreign delegates to use the term Iran the endonym of the country used since the Sasanian Empire in formal correspondence Since then the use of the word Iran has become more common in Western countries This also changed the usage of the terms for Iranian nationality and the common adjective for citizens of Iran changed from Persian to Iranian In 1959 the government of Mohammad Reza Pahlavi Reza Shah Pahlavi s son announced that both Persia and Iran could officially be used interchangeably 22 The issue is still debated today 23 24 There is a tendency among Iranian Americans to categorize themselves as Persian rather than Iranian mainly to dissociate themselves from the negative stereotypes of Iranians in media 17 Some Iranian Americans also don t prefer Iranian to disassociate themselves with the Islamic Republic of Iran 25 yet this rationale has been criticized as the term Iran was widely used before 1979 as well 17 The term Iranian is regarded as more inclusive than Persian as the term Persian excludes non Persian ethnic minorities of Iran 25 While the majority of Iranian Americans come from Persian backgrounds there is a significant number of non Persian Iranians such as Azeris 26 27 28 and Kurds within the Iranian American community 25 29 leading some scholars to believe that the label Iranian is more inclusive since the label Persian excludes non Persian minorities 25 30 31 History editEarly history edit nbsp This article contains Persian text Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols See also History of the Iranian Americans in Los Angeles One of the first recorded Iranians to visit North America was Martin the Armenian an Iranian Armenian tobacco grower who settled in Jamestown Virginia in 1618 32 33 Mirza Mohammad Ali also known as Hajj Sayyah was an Iranian who came to North America in the 1800s He was inspired to travel around the world due to the contradiction between the democratic ideals he read about and how his fellow Iranians were treated by their leaders He began his travels as a 23 year old looking for knowledge to experience the lives of others and to use that knowledge to help with Iran s progress His stay in the United States lasted 10 years and he traveled across the country from New York to San Francisco He met a variety of influential American figures including President Ulysses S Grant who met with him on several occasions 34 On 26 May 1875 Hajj Sayyah became the first Iranian to become an American citizen He was imprisoned upon his return to Iran for taking a stand against living conditions there He looked to the United States to protect him but to no avail 34 During the peak period of worldwide emigration to the United States 1842 1903 only 130 Iranian nationals were known to have immigrated 35 First phase of emigration edit The first wave of Iranian migration to the United States occurred from the late 1940s to 1977 35 or 1979 36 The United States was an attractive destination for students as American universities offered some of the best programs in engineering and other fields and were eager to attract students from foreign countries 36 Iranian students most of whom had learned English as a second language in Iran were highly desirable as new students at colleges and universities in the United States 36 By the mid 1970s nearly half of all Iranian students who studied abroad did so in the United States 36 By 1975 the Institute of International Education s annual foreign student census figures listed Iranian students as the largest group of foreign students in the United States amounting to a total of 9 of all foreign students in the country 36 As the Iranian economy continued to rise steadily in the 70s it enabled many more Iranians to travel abroad freely 36 Consequently the number of Iranian visitors to the United States also increased considerably from 35 088 in 1975 to 98 018 in 1977 36 37 During the 1977 78 academic year of about 100 000 Iranian students abroad 36 220 were enrolled in American institutions of higher learning During the 1978 79 academic year on the eve of the revolution the number of Iranian students enrolled in American institutions rose to 45 340 and in 1979 80 that number reached a peak of 51 310 At that time according to the Institute of International Education more students from Iran were enrolled in American universities than from any other foreign country 35 The pattern of Iranian migration during this phase usually only involved individuals not whole families 35 Due to Iran s increasing demand for educated workers in the years before the revolution the majority of the Iranian students in America intended to return home after graduation to work especially those who had received financial aid from the Iranian government or from industry on condition of returning to take jobs upon graduation Due to the drastic events of the 1979 Revolution the students ended up staying in the United States as refugees 35 These several thousand visitors and students unintentionally became the basis of the cultural economic and social networks that would enable large scale immigration in the years that followed 36 Second phase edit The second phase of Iranian migration began immediately before and after the Iranian Revolution of 1979 and the overthrow of the Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi 35 and became significant in the early 1980s 35 As Ronald H Bayor writes The 1979 Revolution and the 1980 88 war with Iraq transformed Iran s class structure politically socially and economically 38 The revolution drastically changed the pattern and nature of Iranian emigration to the United States while the Iran Iraq War that ensued afterwards was also another factor that forced many of the best educated and most wealthy families into exile in the United States and other countries Once basically an issue of brain drain during the Pahlavi period it was now predominantly an involuntary emigration of a relatively large number of middle and upper class families including the movement of a considerable amount of wealth 38 During and after the revolution most students did not return to Iran and those who did were gradually purged from the newly established Islamic Republic Many students who graduated abroad after the revolution also did not return due to the ruling clergy s repression As a result the educated elite who left Iran after the revolution and the new graduates in the United States who chose not to return home created a large pool of highly educated and skilled Iranian professionals in the United States By 2002 an estimated 1 5 to 2 5 million Iranians lived abroad mainly in North America and Europe due to the Islamic government s authoritarian practices 39 A further notable aspect of the migration in this phase is that members of religious and ethnic minorities were starting to become disproportionally represented among the Iranian American community most notably Bahaʼis Jews Armenians and Assyrians 40 According to the 1980 US Census there were 123 000 Americans of Iranian ancestry at that time 41 Between 1980 and 1990 the number of foreign born people from Iran in the United States increased by 74 percent 10 The revolution caused a drastic change in the Iranian culture Iran was no longer a thriving country This is part of the reason so many Iranians began to flee to America 42 Contemporary period edit nbsp Max Amini Persian American stand up comedian The third phase of Iranian immigration started in 1995 and continues to the present 43 According to the 2000 US Census there were 283 225 Iranian born people in the US 44 According to the same 2000 US Census there were 385 488 Americans of Iranian ancestry at that time 45 The 2011 American Community Survey ACS estimate found 470 341 Americans with full or partial Iranian ancestry 1 However most experts believe that this is a problem of underrepresenting due to the fact that many community members have been reluctant in identifying themselves as such because of the problems between Iran and the United States in the past two decades and also because many were ethnic minorities Jewish Armenian and Assyrian Iranians who instead identify as the ethnic group they are part of rather than as Iranians 46 Estimates of 1 000 000 and above are given by many Iranian and non Iranian organizations media and scholars Kenneth Katzman specialist in Middle Eastern affairs and part of the Congressional Research Service in December 2015 estimated the number at over 1 000 000 47 Paul Harvey and Edward Blum of the University of Colorado and the University of San Diego in 2012 estimated their number at 1 000 000 48 as well as Al Jazeera 49 According to the PAAIA Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans estimates range from 500 000 to 1 000 000 50 51 numbers backed up by Ronald H Bayor of the Georgia Institute of Technology as well 52 The Atlantic stated that there were an estimated 1 500 000 Iranians in the United States in 2012 53 The Iranian interest section in Washington D C in 2003 claimed to hold passport information for approximately 900 000 Iranians in the US 46 54 Today the United States contains the highest number of Iranians outside of Iran The Iranian American community has produced individuals notable in many fields including medicine engineering and business Demographics edit nbsp Relative population distribution estimate of 1st and 2nd generation Iranian Americans living in the United States by percentage of total population 55 gt 49 of all Iranians 6 9 of all Iranians 2 5 of all Iranians lt 1 but may still be a notable populationSee also Demography of the United States and Demography of Iran Although Iranians have lived in the United States in relatively small numbers since the 1930s a large number of Iranian Americans immigrated to the United States after the Iranian Revolution of 1979 Data on this group is well documented by the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services USCIS According to the 2000 US Census there were 385 488 Americans of Iranian ancestry at that time 45 In the 2011 ACS the number of Americans of full or partial Iranian ancestry amounted c 470 341 1 Population edit Federal data on Iranian Americans in the 2010 United States Census was not according to race but rather ancestry which is collected by the annual American Community Survey ACS Data on Iranian ancestry from the annual ACS is available on the Census Bureau s American Factfinder website 56 57 Racially on the Census Iranian Americans have been classified as a white American group Most experts believe that the underrepresented number of Iranian Americans in the ACS is a problem due to the fact that many community members have been reluctant in identifying themselves as such because of the problems between Iran and the United States in the past two decades 46 Estimations of 1 000 000 and above are given by many Iranian and non Iranian organizations media and scholars Kenneth Katzman specialist in Middle Eastern affairs and part of the Congressional Research Service estimated their number at over 1 000 000 in published December 2015 47 Historians Paul Harvey and Edward Blum estimate their number at 1 000 000 in 2012 48 as well as Al Jazeera 49 According to the PAAIA Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans estimates range from 500 000 to 1 000 000 50 numbers backed by Ronald H Bayor of the Georgia Institute of Technology 52 The Atlantic in 2012 stated that there are an estimated 1 500 000 Iranians in the United States 53 The Iranian interest section in Washington D C in 2003 claimed to hold passport information for approximately 900 000 Iranians in the US 46 54 According to research done by the Iranian Studies Group an independent academic organization at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology MIT 58 Iranian Americans are most likely far more numerous in the United States than census data indicate The group estimates that the number of Iranian Americans may have topped 691 000 in 2004 more than twice the figure of 338 000 cited in the 2000 U S census 10 15 Sources from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Iran have stated the United States has the highest number of Iranians outside the country stating 1 500 000 Iranians who were born in Iran are living in the U S However this number only represents Iranian born population who moved to the U S at some point and does not include the number of U S born Iranian Americans and other groups with Iranian ancestors 14 59 Roughly half of the nation s Iranians reside in the state of California alone 16 Other large communities include New York New Jersey which have 9 1 of the U S s Iranian population followed by Washington D C Maryland Virginia 8 3 and Texas 6 7 7 60 Approximately 6 000 10 000 Iranian Americans reside in the city of Chicago while up to 30 000 reside in the Chicago metropolitan area Some of this population is Iranian Assyrian 61 Kings Point New York a village in Great Neck New York is said to have the largest concentration of Iranians in the United States nearly 30 62 However unlike the population in Los Angeles the Great Neck population is almost exclusively Jewish 63 Nashville Tennessee has the largest Kurdish population in the United States with many of them coming from Iran Significant Persian population centers edit California edit nbsp The Los Angeles metropolitan area has the largest concentration of Iranian Americans An area along Westwood Boulevard in Los Angeles has been officially designated Persian Square by the city It is widely believed that most Iranian Americans in the United States are clustered in the large cities of California namely Greater Los Angeles the San Francisco Bay Area San Diego Sacramento and Fresno According to extrapolated U S Census data and other independent surveys done by Iranian Americans themselves in 2009 there were an estimated one million Iranian Americans living in the U S 64 with the largest concentration about 300 000 people living in the greater Los Angeles area 64 65 For this reason the Westwood L A area with its Iranian American residents is sometimes colloquially referred to as Tehrangeles Irangeles or Little Persia among Iranian Americans 66 67 In 1985 the Los Angeles Times estimated 200 000 Iranian Americans were living in California and by 1991 the estimate jumped to 800 000 however the accuracy of these numbers could be debated due to a lack of data 68 66 In 1990 Los Angeles had a larger population of religious minorities than Muslims who were the religious majority in Iran 66 Regarding Iranian Americans of Armenian origin the 1980 US Census put the number of Armenians living in Los Angeles at 52 400 of whom 71 9 were foreign born 14 7 in Iran 14 3 in the USSR 11 5 in Lebanon 9 7 in Turkey 11 7 in other Middle Eastern countries Egypt Iraq Israel etc and the rest in other parts of the world 69 Beverly Hills Irvine and Glendale all have large communities of Iranian Americans much of the Iranian population in Glendale being of Armenian descent 26 of the total population of Beverly Hills is Iranian Jewish making it the city s largest religious community 7 70 71 Iranian Americans have formed ethnic enclaves in many affluent neighborhoods mostly in the Los Angeles metropolitan area In Los Angeles Iranians were concentrated in Tarzana West Hills Hidden Hills Woodland Hills Beverly Hills Calabasas Brentwood and Rancho Palos Verdes 72 Tarzana has the highest concentration of Iranians in Los Angeles County according to the U S Census in 2000 73 Second generation Iranians located outside these concentrated cities showed high rates of marrying a non Iranian and low literacy rates in Persian 72 Areas in Los Angeles with the highest concentrations of Persians 2015 Rank Cities Percentage of population of Persian descent 74 1 Beverly Hills 20 8 2 West Los Angeles 12 2 3 Westwood 10 3 4 Tarzana Los Angeles 10 3 5 Woodland Hills Los Angeles 8 8 6 Bel Air Los Angeles 8 8 7 Century City 8 1 8 Rancho Palos Verdes 3 7 In San Diego County the communities of La Jolla and Westlake village also held a large Iranian population La Jolla was the first American city to have an Iranian American mayor Iraj Broomand 75 76 Texas edit Texas also has a large population of Iranian descent 77 And like California Iranians in Texas are concentrated in the larger major cities of the state Houston has the largest population of Iranians and Iranian expats with an estimated 70 000 residents 50 000 in 1994 78 mainly due to the Texas Medical Center and the presence of large energy companies Houston contains a Persian business district including shops and restaurants that has been dubbed Little Persia by the Houston Press 79 80 There are many Iranian Zoroastrians 81 and Bahaʼis living there 82 83 Some of the more well known residents of the Houston area in the past or present are Jasmin Moghbeli Susan Roshan Shawn Daivari Farinaz Koushanfar and Kavon Hakimzadeh captain of the USS Harry Truman Naval aircraft carrier 84 Ibrahim Yazdi was a graduate of Baylor College of Medicine and Kamal Kharazi also is an alumnus of University of Houston Hushang Ansary an active philanthropist has been a founding benefactor of the Houston Museum of Fine Arts 85 86 The George Bush Presidential Library has a gallery named after him 87 88 Iranians in Houston particularly came under the spotlight when Iranian student and activist Gelareh Bagherzadeh was murdered in Houston in 2012 89 The perpetrator Ali Irsan was later convicted and sentenced to death for the crime 90 an honor killing in retaliation against Bagherzadeh s encouragement of Irsan s daughter to leave Islam and marry a Christian man 91 92 The other notable Iranian in Texas that gained national attention in recent years was UT Austin s Omid Kokabee who was imprisoned in Iran for political reasons The Dallas Fort Worth metropolitan area is estimated to have over 30 000 Iranian Americans Iran s first astronaut Anousheh Ansari for many years was a resident of Plano Texas a suburb of Dallas Fort Worth 93 Dallas Iranian community was large and influential enough to host US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo for a private visit in April 2019 94 95 And San Antonio and Austin each are said to have 3000 5000 Iranian American residents each who are mostly attracted to large academic centers of excellence such as South Texas Medical Center and UT Austin or the climate of the Texas Hill Country area that is not un similar to the southern Iran Zagros Mountains region The largest concentration of Mandaeans from Khuzestan outside the middle east are settled in the San Antonio area 96 97 The Shah of Iran was also last hospitalized at San Antonio s Wilford Hall Ambulatory Surgical Center in Lackland Air Force Base during his last days 98 This is the same base that trained many pilots of Iran s Royal Air Force before the 1979 revolution nbsp Public party during Chaharshanbe Suri in San Antonio nbsp Shahrvand newsletter has been published in Dallas for over 20 years nbsp A popular Persian restaurant in southern Texas nbsp Kavon Hakimzadeh the captain of the USS Harry Truman is a Texan by birth Religion edit See also Irreligion in Iran and Religion in Iran Many Iranian Americans are non Muslim due to the religious composition of those fleeing the Iranian Revolution which included a disproportionate share of Iran s religious minorities as well as subsequent ex Muslim asylum seekers and other conversions away from Islam Many Iranian Americans identify as irreligious or Shiite but a full one fifth are Christians Jews Bahaʼis or Zoroastrians 99 Additionally there are also some Iranian Mandaeans but they are very small in number According to Pew Research about 22 of those who left Islam in the United States are Iranian Americans 100 A 2012 national telephone survey of a sample of 400 Iranian Americans commissioned by the Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans and conducted by Zogby Research Services asked the respondents what their religions were The responses broke down as follows Muslim 31 atheist realist humanist 11 agnostic 8 Bahaʼi 7 Jewish 5 Protestant 5 Roman Catholic 2 Zoroastrian 2 Other 15 and No response 15 9 The survey had a cooperation rate of 31 2 9 The margin of error for the results was 5 percentage points with higher margins of error for sub groups 9 Notably the number of Muslims decreased from 42 in 2008 to 31 in 2012 9 101 According to Harvard University s Robert D Putnam the average Iranian is slightly less religious than the average American 102 In the book Social Movements in 20th Century Iran Culture Ideology and Mobilizing Frameworks author Stephen C Poulson adds that Western ideas are making Iranians irreligious 103 There are religious and ethnolinguistic differences among the Muslim Jewish Bahaʼi Zoroastrian Christian Armenian Azerbaijani Kurdish and Assyrian groups 104 Calculating the percentage of Christian Iranian Americans is difficult because most Iranian Christians especially those raised in the faith are of Armenian or Assyrian origin and apart from identifying as Iranian a number amongst them also strongly self identifies as Armenian or Assyrian rather than as or apart from Iranian 36 105 Ethnicity edit The majority of Iranian Americans are ethnic Persians with sizeable ethnic minorities being Iranian Azerbaijanis Armenians Iranian Jews Kurds Assyrians Mandaeans Turkmen Baloch Arabs among others 106 According to Hakimzadeh and Dixon in 2006 members of religious and ethnic minorities such as Bahaʼis Jews Armenians and Assyrians were disproportionately represented amongst the early exiles of the 1978 1979 revolution 40 Citizenship edit According to DHS in 2015 13 114 people born in Iran were issued green cards while 13 298 were issued one in 2016 In 2015 10 344 Iranians became naturalized with a further 9 507 in 2016 107 Nearly all Iranians who reside in the United States are either citizens 81 or permanent residents 15 of the United States 2008 survey 108 Iranian Americans regard their culture and heritage as an important component of their day to day life and their overall identity within the United States 109 Integration editFour benchmarks are traditionally used to measure assimilation language proficiency intermarriage spatial concentration and socio economic status citation needed Per these criteria one can determine with a significant degree of confidence that the Iranian American community has made significant strides in successfully assimilating to a new culture and way of living 36 According to a survey commissioned by the Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans PAAIA in 2008 only 21 percent of Iranian Americans reported interacting mostly with other Iranian Americans outside of their workplace demonstrating that most of them have successfully integrated into United States society 36 The intermarriage rate is very high among Iranian Americans 36 It has been estimated that nearly 50 percent of Iranian Americans who married between 1995 and 2007 married non Iranian Americans 36 Research has furthermore indicated that Iranian Americans who are Muslim are more open to intermarry than those who are members of religious or ethnic minorities such as Jews and Armenians 36 Compared to men Iranian women are less likely to mix or intermarry outside their group which according to the PAAIA is likely because as a group they are more likely to adhere to traditional Iranian values including making marriages that are approved by their families and are within Iranian cultural norms 36 Regarding language proficiency in the United States among its immigrant groups the first generation principally speaks their native language the second generation speaks both English and their parents language and the third generation typically speaks only English while maintaining a knowledge of some isolated words and phrases from their ancestral tongue 36 The Iranian American community follows this pattern 36 Community Outreach edit Camp Ayandeh sponsored annually by the Iranian Alliances Across Borders IAAB has attracted children of the Iranian diaspora from multiple nations with the intention of uniting Iranian youth following the mass migration after the fall of the Shah 110 111 Education edit See also Education in Iran According to Bayor from the very beginning Iranian immigrants differed from other arrivals in their high educational and professional achievements 112 According to Census 2000 50 9 percent of Iranian immigrants have attained a bachelor s degree or higher compared to a 28 0 percent national average 10 According to the latest census data available more than one in four Iranian Americans holds a master s or doctoral degree the highest rate among 67 ethnic groups studied 11 A 1990 University of California Los Angeles study showed that by virtue of education and occupation native born and Armenian Americans of Iranian origin tend to have the highest socioeconomic status while those from Turkey have the lowest although Turkish Armenians boast the highest rate of self employment 113 In 1988 a New York Times article claimed that Middle Eastern Armenians which includes Armenians from Iran preferred to settle in Glendale California while Armenian immigrants from the Soviet Union were attracted to Hollywood Los Angeles 114 A study regarding Americans of Armenian descent showed that Armenians from Iran Iranian Armenians are known for quick integration into American society 115 for example only 31 of Armenian Americans born in Iran claim not to speak English well 116 while those Armenians from other nations were shown to have less success at integrating Occupations and income edit The Small Business Administration SBA conducted a study that found Iranian immigrants among the top 20 immigrant groups with the highest rate of business ownership contributing substantially to the U S economy According to the report there were 33 570 active and contributing Iranian American business owners in the U S with a 21 5 business ownership rate The study also found that the total net business income generated by Iranian Americans was 2 56 billion 117 Almost one in three Iranian American households have annual incomes of more than 100 000 compared to one in five for the overall U S population 118 Ali Mostasahri a founding member of the Iranian Studies Group offers a reason for the relative success of Iranian Americans compared to other immigrants He believes that unlike many other immigrants who left their home countries because of economic hardships Iranians left due to social or religious reasons like the 1979 revolution 15 About 50 percent of all working Iranian Americans are in professional and managerial occupations a percentage greater than any other group in the United States Bayor 2011 112 Physicians edit See also Iranian American Medical Association The earliest Iranian people in the U S were mostly young trainees who worked as medical interns or residents Some established themselves to continue practice beyond the residency stage Their motives to extend their stay in the United States were more for professional than economic reasons Researchers from Johns Hopkins University in 1974 reported in the Journal of the American Medical Association that in 1971 the number of Iranian physicians in the U S was 1 625 The authors further studied the causes for immigration by sending questionnaire to all Iranian MDs in the United States According to the 660 respondents the main reasons for migration were mandatory two years military service low salaries as compared to the United States expensive housing and socio political reasons 119 In 2013 another report was published in the Archive of Iranian Medicine AIM saying that post revolution the number of Iranian medical school graduates in the United States had grown to 5 045 Those who migrated to the U S after the 1979 revolution were mostly experienced physicians who came with their families and an intent to stay permanently As of 2013 update there are 5 050 Iranian medical school graduates in the United States 120 Prior to the revolution the 1 626 physicians migrated to the United States were 15 of all Iranian medical school graduates while the 5 045 medical graduates who migrated post Islamic Revolution represent only 5 of total Iranian medical graduates This is not indicative of the entire United States merely of the areas in which most of the Iranian American population is concentrated 121 Politics editSee also Iran US relations and US sanctions against Iran nbsp Stephanie Bice the first Iranian American elected to Congress from the Republican Party nbsp Most important issues to the Iranian American communityThough Iranian Americans have historically excelled in business academia and the sciences they have traditionally shied away from participating in American politics or other civic activities 64 Iranian Americans do not appear to engage in American politics as demonstrated by survey results from large cities showing only 10 percent of them voted in the 2004 election 122 In Los Angeles Iranian Americans paid for a billboard to inform thousands of travelers on the 405 freeway of how the Iranian regime had murdered ten thousand political prisoners 123 An August 2008 Zogby International poll commissioned by the Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans found that approximately one half of Iranian Americans identified themselves as registered Democrats in contrast to one in eight as Republicans and one in four as independents 2008 108 A 2019 Zogby International survey commissioned by PAAIA found that in the 2016 presidential election 56 of Iranian Americans respondents voted for Hillary Clinton the democratic candidate The survey also states that 69 of Iranian American respondents planned to vote for the democratic candidate in the 2020 election 124 The same 2008 PAAIA poll indicates that more than half of Iranian Americans cite domestic U S issues including issues that are not unique to Iranian Americans as the most important to them In contrast one quarter of Iranian Americans cite foreign policy issues involving Iran U S relations and less than one in ten cite the internal affairs of Iran as being of greatest importance to them 108 More recently the 2019 Zogby International survey commissioned by the Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans found that one half of Iranian American respondents consider foreign policy most important when voting 125 This is a significant increase from the one quarter of Iranian Americans that reported foreign policy issues such as the Iran U S relationship as important in 2008 Similarly the 2019 survey also suggested that 75 of Iranian American respondents perceived the Trump Administration s Iranian foreign policy negatively 125 In 2017 the Trump administration put strict travel restrictions on travel to the United States from several countries including Iran 126 The survey indicates that this travel ban instituted by the Trump administration in 2017 received opposition from 76 of respondents In contrast only 16 of respondents supported the ban The survey states that 70 of respondents have been personally affected by the travel ban or had family and friends affected by the ban 125 From 1980 to 2004 more than one out of every four Iranian immigrants was a refugee or asylee 10 The PAAIA Zogby poll cites that almost three quarters of Iranian Americans believe the promotion of human rights and democracy in Iran is the most important issue relating to Iran U S relations About the same percentage believe diplomacy is the foreign policy approach towards Iran that would be in the best interest of the United States 84 support establishing a U S Interest Section in Iran 108 Nearly all Iranian Americans surveyed oppose any U S military attack against Iran 127 Ties to Iran editSee also Communications in Iran Economy of Iran and Tehran Stock Exchange According to a survey conducted in 2009 more than six in ten Iranian Americans have immediate family members in Iran and almost three in ten communicate with their families or friends in Iran at least several times a week An additional four in ten communicate with their families or friends in Iran at least several times a month This study indicates an unusually close relationship between Iranian Americans and Iranians 127 In the updated 2019 PAAIA survey 15 of Iranian American respondents reported contacting with friends and family in Iran daily while 26 of respondents communicated with relatives in Iran several times a week Additionally 26 of Iranian American respondents contacted with family and friends in Iran several times a month and 14 communicated with relatives in Iran several times a year The survey also indicated that 74 of Iranian American respondents preferred contacting their relatives in Iran via phone calls but communication over mobile communications apps and internet services had increased to 69 and 66 respectively 125 As of 2013 U S laws require U S persons to obtain a license from the U S Office of Foreign Assets Control OFAC to engage in transactions related to the sale of their personal property in Iran 128 Similarly US persons will need a license from OFAC to open a bank account or transfer money to Iran 129 Travel to Iran edit See also Tourism in Iran The U S government does not have diplomatic or consular relations with the Islamic Republic of Iran and therefore cannot provide protection or routine consular services to U S citizens in Iran The Swiss government acting through its embassy in Tehran serves as protecting power for U S interests in Iran 130 The Iranian government does not recognize dual citizenship and will not allow the Swiss to provide protective services for U S citizens who are also Iranian nationals The Iranian authorities make the determination of a dual national s Iranian citizenship without regard to personal wishes 130 In 2016 the U S Department of State warned U S citizens of the risks of travel to Iran In some instances foreigners in particular dual nationals of Iran and Western countries including the United States have been detained or prevented from leaving Iran 130 Accomplishments editIn Los Angeles Persians have become the largest ethnic group in many Los Angeles wealthiest enclaves including Bel Air Beverly Hills Tarzana Encino and Woodland Hills 131 The Iranian Revolution resulted in many Iranians fleeing to America in the late 1970s where forty years later Iranian immigrants have become a major force in Silicon Valley as investors executives and creators Iranians have been founders or senior executives at eBay Oracle Google Dropbox YouTube Uber Expedia Twitter and other major corporations 132 After surveying Fortune 500 companies researchers at Massachusetts Institute of Technology discovered that 50 Iranian Americans held senior leadership positions at companies with more than 200 million in asset value citation needed Iranians have the highest percentage of master s degrees than any other ethnic group in the United States 133 Iranians have also played a large role in the American education system with over 500 Iranian American professors teaching at top ranked U S universities which include Massachusetts Institute of Technology Harvard University Yale University Princeton University University of California Berkeley University of California Los Angeles and Stanford University 134 Iranian philanthropists constructed the Freedom Sculpture in the Century City neighborhood in honor of the Persian artifact Cyrus Cylinder 135 Representation editTelevision edit nbsp Davar Ardalan Executive Producer of Audio at National Geographic and longtime journalist at NPR news Early Iranian diaspora television has been credited with helping form the local community in the United States 136 As a result of the Iranian Revolution the first Iranian American television was formed and with its formation there were existing political factions that were carried over 66 The dominant voice in television during this time was from the royalist support 66 It was argued by scholar Hamid Naficy this was not due to political sponsorship but rather due to market support 66 Up until 1992 most all Iranian American television programming was in the Farsi language with exceptions to Assyrian and Armenian languages this included for Iranian Kurdish and Azeri specific shows in Farsi 66 68 Most all programming was non religious and this was reflecting the population of more minority religions of Los Angeles 66 There are no reliable statistics on viewership because Middle Eastern and Iranian wasn t defined by rating services such as Nielsen Holdings however the Los Angeles Times estimated by 1991 the Iranian American population was roughly 800 000 which would indicate the opening of a new share of the television viewing market 68 The Long Beach based independent television station KSCI TV dubbed themselves the international station and claimed to offer the most diverse ethnic television programming in the early 1980s including the majority of Iranian American television during this time 68 Starting on March 15 1981 the first Iranian diaspora television broadcast show IRTV acronym for Iranian television was created by Ali Limonadi in Los Angeles 137 Other early Iranian American television programs included Nadar Rafii s Midnight Show 138 Parviz Sayyad s Parsian TV on KSCI TV 136 Hamid Shabkhiz s Iran 136 and Manuchehr Bibian s also known as Manouchehr Bibiyan Jaam e Jam TV channel 138 Other notables in Iranian American television programs in the 1980s included Shohreh Aqdashlu s Sima va Nava ye Iran TV Parviz Kardan s Shahr e Farang TV and Hushang Towzi s multiple television series 139 140 141 In 2013 BravoTV launched Shahs of Sunset which followed a group of six Iranian American friends in Los Angeles who try to juggle their active social lives and careers while also balancing the demands of their families and traditions the show was accused of racism and relaying on stereotypes in a petition 142 143 In 2020 the television series Taste the Nation with Padma Lakshmi season 1 episode 6 Where The Kabob is Hot focused on Persian food in Los Angeles where Lakshmi interviewed Bottom of the Pot cookbook author Naz Deravian Shamshiri Grill owner Hamid Mosavi and comedian Maz Jobrani 144 145 146 Film edit Iranian Americans have been the focus of film documentaries including The Iranian Americans 2012 directed by Andrew Goldberg and Immigration Stories Iranian Americans of Silicon Valley 2021 directed by Nima Naimi Alireza Sanayei Julian Gigola 147 148 149 Critical response in the HuffPost of The Iranian Americans 2012 PBS documentary included a lack of representation for interracial marriage 150 Fictional films with Iranian American themes include the satire Jimmy Vestvood Amerikan Hero 2014 directed by Jonathan Kesselman 151 and Shirin in Love 2014 directed by Ramin Niami 152 The fictional drama Surviving Paradise 2001 is the first English language Iranian film with theatrical release in the United States the storyline is about two Iranian refugees in Los Angeles 153 Education edit The Center for Iranian Diaspora Studies at San Francisco State University directed and chaired by Persis Karim was founded in 2017 and was the first program specifically focused on Iranian diaspora which includes Iranian Americans 154 155 The center offers grants fellowships and scholarships as well as scholarly lecture series research and creative performances 154 156 157 Discrimination editSee also Anti Iranian sentiment According to the Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans nearly half of Iranian Americans surveyed in 2008 by Zogby International have experienced or personally know Iranian Americans who have experienced discrimination due to their ethnicity religion or country of origin The most common types of discrimination reported are airport security check social discrimination racial profiling employment or business discrimination and discrimination at the hands of immigration officials 108 In the United States Iranians have mistaken as Arabs by the media government and public Many Iranians are known for their pride in their culture and according to the Orange County Register nothing annoys Iranian Americans more than being mistaken for Arabs 158 159 In 2009 Martin Kramer a Harvard professor warned about the dangers of allowing Iranian Americans to get too close to power during the 2009 American Israel Public Affairs Committee AIPAC conference 160 In 2009 Merrill Lynch amp Co agreed to pay 1 55 million to resolve a U S government lawsuit accusing the bank of discriminating against an Iranian American employee The government accused the firm of refusing to promote and later firing this employee on the basis of his national origin and religion 161 On 8 September 2015 22 year old Iranian American Shayan Mazroei was stabbed to death by white supremacist Craig Tanber Mazroei who resided in Laguna Niguel was a successful businessman operating his own car dealership in Santa Ana On the night of 8 September 2015 Mazroei began discussing his mother visiting Iran to his girlfriend in a restaurant until Elizabeth Anne Thornburg spat on Mazroei shouting racial slurs Tanber who would later be sentenced to life in prison 162 then proceeded to stab Mazroei resulting in his death 163 164 In 2017 in the Kansas City suburb of Olathe Adam Purinton shot and killed two Indians at a bar mistaking them for Iranian While murdering them Puriton yelled Get out of my country 165 In 2018 while on national television having a discussion about taking a DNA test Senator Lindsey Graham remarked that it would be terrible if he discovered he had Iranian heritage 166 Graham s statement outraged many high profile Iranian Americans including Omid Kordestani chairman of Twitter Ali Partovi and Hadi Partovi CEOs of Code org Pejman Nozad 167 and British Iranian Christiane Amanpour 168 In 2020 the United States Border Patrol instituted a large scale detention of Iranian Americans at the Canadian border without probable cause While returning to the U S from Canada Americans of Iranian heritage were detained by border officers Over 60 Americans of Iranian descent were detained and interrogated at the Canadian border The incident took place during a time of escalated tensions between Iran and the U S 169 Notable people editFor a more comprehensive list see List of Iranian Americans Business and technology edit Iranian Americans are among the most educated and successful communities in the U S according to a report by the Iranian Studies group at MIT Iranian Americans have founded or hold senior leadership positions at many major US companies including Fortune 500 companies such as GE Intel Citigroup Verizon Motorola Google and AT amp T 170 Pierre Omidyar founder CEO of eBay is of Iranian origin as is the founder of Bratz Isaac Larian Hamid Biglari is vice chairman of Citicorp 171 Bob Miner was the co founder of Oracle Corporation and the producer of Oracle s relational database management system 172 In 2006 Anousheh Ansari co founder of the Ansari X Prize became the first female tourist in space Ansari is also the co founder and former CEO of Prodea Systems Inc and Telecom Technologies Inc Other well known Iranian American entrepreneurs include designer Bijan Pakzad entrepreneur Sam Nazarian business executive Hamid Akhavan former CEO of Unify GmbH amp Co KG formerly Siemens Enterprise Communications 173 Omid Kordestani of Twitter and former Senior Vice President of Google CEO of YouTube Salar Kamangar Sina Tamaddon of Apple Inc and Shahram Dabiri Lead Producer for the massively multiplayer online role playing game MMORPG World of Warcraft from 1999 to 2007 Dara Khosrowshahi became CEO of Expedia in August 2005 and then in August 2017 Khosrowshahi became the CEO of Uber succeeding founder Travis Kalanick Kam Ghaffarian is the founder of IBX Axiom Space Intuitive Machines and X energy he reportedly has a net worth of 2 1 billion 174 Philanthropy edit Many Iranian Americans are active philanthropists and leaders in improving their community In 2006 the University of Texas M D Anderson Cancer Center was the recipient of a 10 million donation from an Iranian American couple based in Houston Texas 175 176 The University of Southern California was the recipient of a 17 million gift from an Iranian American 177 as was San Francisco State University which received a 10 million gift from an Iranian American couple 178 Chicago s Swedish Covenant Hospital received 4 million 179 Portland State University 8 million 180 and UC Irvine 30 million 181 182 Academia edit Notable Iranian Americans in science include Firouz Naderi a director at NASA Ali Javan inventor of the first gas laser Maryam Mirzakhani the first female winner of the Fields Medal Nima Arkani Hamed a leading theoretical physicist cancer biologist Mina J Bissell Gholam A Peyman the inventor of LASIK Lotfi Asker Zadeh Vartan Gregorian Cumrun Vafa Babak Hassibi Nouriel Roubini Ali Hajimiri Pardis Sabeti Vahid Tarokh Ehsan Afshari George Bournoutian Payam Heydari and Rashid Massumi M D a pioneer in the fields of electrophysiology and cardiology Prominent Iranian Americans in American higher education include Rahmat Shoureshi researcher professor and provost of New York Institute of Technology NYIT and Nariman Farvardin president of Stevens Institute of Technology Media edit Well known American media personalities of Iranian descent include Christiane Amanpour of ABC News and CNN born in England Daron Malakian member of the rock band System of a Down 183 Susie Gharib of Nightly Business Report Asieh Namdar Roya Hakakian Yara Shahidi and Rudi Bakhtiar There are several Iranian American actors comedians and filmmakers including the Academy Award nominee and Emmy Award winner Shohreh Aghdashloo the award winning director producer and screenwriters Amir Cyrus Ahanchian and Cyrus Nowrasteh actresses Tala Ashe Catherine Bell Sarah Shahi Nadia Bjorlin Nasim Pedrad Desiree Akhavan Sheila Vand Necar Zadegan Medalion Rahimi and Bahar Soomekh actors Adrian Pasdar Shaun Toub Arian Moayed Navid Negahban Reza Sixo Safai Shahaub Roudbari and Aria Shahghasemi musicians Sarah Fard Savoir Faire 184 and Rostam Batmanglij comedians Max Amini Maz Jobrani and Tehran Von Ghasri filmmakers Bavand Karim and Kamshad Kooshan producers Bob Yari and Farhad Safinia author and performer Shahram Shiva and artist and filmmaker Daryush Shokof Notable children s media writer director Shabnam Rezaei has created several children s TV series on Hulu and PBSKids There are also notable American YouTube personalities of Iranian descent including JonTron Sports edit Professional tennis player Andre Agassi NFL football players T J Houshmandzadeh David Bakhtiari and Shar Pourdanesh professional wrestlers Shawn Daivari and The Iron Sheik professional mixed martial artist Amir Sadollah professional soccer players Alecko Eskandarian and Steven Beitashour and professional soccer coach Afshin Ghotbi Politics edit The son of the late Shah of Iran Reza Pahlavi as well as several high ranking officials in the Shah s administration such as Hushang Ansary and Jamshid Amouzegar live or have lived in the United States Goli Ameri is the Under Secretary General for Humanitarian Affairs of the International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies as well as the former U S Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs from 2008 to 2009 during which she was the highest ranking Iranian American public official in the United States Drug policy expert Kevin Sabet is Iranian American and the only person to serve as an appointee in the drug czar s office of George W Bush and Barack Obama Beverly Hills elected its first Iranian born Mayor Jimmy Delshad in 2007 185 186 Bob Yousefian served as the mayor of Glendale California from 2004 to 2005 In November 2011 Anna M Kaplan was elected Councilwoman in the Town of North Hempstead New York becoming the first Iranian American to be elected to a major municipal office in New York State 187 Cyrus Amir Mokri who was appointed as the Treasury Department Assistant Secretary for Financial Institutions by President Obama is the highest ranking Iranian American official in government as of 2012 188 In November 2012 Cyrus Habib of Washington state and Adrin Nazarian of California became the first Iranian Americans elected to state legislatures Habib is now the Lieutenant Governor of Washington and the first Iranian American elected to any statewide office Champaign County Ohio elected Fereidoun Shokouhi to the public office of Champaign County Engineer in 1995 He served until his retirement in 2012 Following the 2020 United States House of Representatives elections Oklahoma Rep Stephanie Bice became the first Iranian American elected to Congress 189 Azadeh Shahshahani is a human rights attorney based in Atlanta and is a former president of the National Lawyers Guild 190 See also edit nbsp United States portal nbsp Iran portalIranian American Bar Association Iranian American Medical Association Iranian diaspora Iranian nationality law Iranian Psychological Association of America Iran United States relations List of Iran related topics List of Persia related topics Little Persia Los Angeles California Mandaean Americans Middle Eastern Americans National Iranian American Council Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans Shirzanan Tehrangeles History of Iranian Americans in Los AngelesReferences edit a b c U S Census Bureau 2011 American Community Survey 1 Year Estimates Retrieved 7 January 2016 How many Iranians are in the U S A Shargh Newspaper in Persian Entekhab Professional News Site 20 May 2012 Retrieved 11 April 2017 Revealing of the number of Iranians in the outside Iran Hafte Sobh Newspaper in Persian Bartarinha News Portal 9 September 2012 Retrieved 11 April 2017 a b Iranian National Organization for Civil Registration More than 2 million Iranians live in the U S A and the U A E in Persian Radio Farda 7 September 2012 Retrieved 11 April 2017 IRANIAN COMMUNITY USA Organization of Iranian American Communities OIAC Retrieved 8 March 2023 Alvarado Monsy 20 March 2014 N J Iranians celebrate Persian New Year with music dance in Englewood North Jersey Media Group Archived from the original on 22 March 2014 Retrieved 21 March 2014 a b c Fata Soraya Rafii Raha September 2003 The Relative Concentration of Iranian Americans Across the United States Iran Census Report PDF National Iranian American Council Archived from the original PDF on 5 January 2019 Retrieved 12 January 2016 Vandenberge Jordan 3 January 2020 Iranian Americans in Cleveland keeping close eye on rising tensions between US Iran WEWS TV Retrieved 13 June 2021 a b c d e 2012 National Public Opinion Survey of Iranian Americans regarding Potential Military Strike Against Iran PDF paaia org 2012 p 14 Archived from the original PDF on 25 July 2012 Retrieved 12 February 2019 a b c d e f Migration Information Source Spotlight on the Iranian Foreign Born Migrationinformation org June 2006 Retrieved 15 February 2010 a b Iranian Americans Reported Among Most Highly Educated in U S Payvand com 24 November 2006 Retrieved 15 February 2010 Ansari Azadeh 16 June 2009 Iranian Americans cast ballots on Iran s future CNN Retrieved 15 February 2010 Etehad Melissa 4 February 2019 They can t go back to Iran So L A Persians built Tehrangeles and made it their own Los Angeles Times Retrieved 3 October 2019 a b Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 5 June 2021 Retrieved 6 June 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link dead link a b c McIntosh Phyllis Iranian Americans Reported Among Most Highly Educated in U S Iranian Americans also contribute substantially to the U S economy State Department Bureau of International Information Programs Retrieved 12 January 2016 a b Amirani Shoku 29 September 2012 Tehrangeles How Iranians made part of LA their own BBC News BBC Retrieved 17 April 2014 a b c Daha Maryam September 2011 Contextual Factors Contributing to Ethnic Identity Development of Second Generation Iranian American Adolescents Journal of Adolescent Research 26 5 543 569 doi 10 1177 0743558411402335 S2CID 146592244 the majority of the participants self identified themselves as Persian instead of Iranian due to the stereotypes and negative portrayals of Iranians in the media and politics Adolescents from Jewish and Baha i faiths asserted their religious identity more than their ethnic identity The fact Iranians use Persian interchangeably is nothing to do with current Iranian government because the name Iran was used before this period as well Linguistically modern Persian is a branch of Old Persian in the family of Indo European languages and that includes all the minorities as well more inclusively Nakamura Raymond M 2003 Health in America A Multicultural Perspective Kendall Hunt Pub p 31 ISBN 978 0 7575 0637 6 Iranian Persian Americans The flow of Iranian citizens into the United States began in 1979 during and after the Islamic Revolution Zanger Mark 2001 The American Ethnic Cookbook for Students ABC CLIO p 213 ISBN 978 1 57356 345 1 Racial and Ethnic Relations in America Carl Leon Bankston Therefore Turkish and Iranian Persian Americans who are Muslims but not ethnically Arabs are often mistakenly Salem Press 2000 Darya Fereshteh Haeri 2007 Second generation Iranian Americans The Relationship Between Ethnic Identity Acculturation and Psychological Well being pp 3 4 ISBN 978 0 542 97374 1 According to previous studies the presence of heterogeneity is evident among Iranian immigrants also known as Persians Iran was known as Persia until 1935 who came from myriads of religious Muslim Christian Jewish Armenian Assyrian Baha i and Zoroastrian ethnic Turk Kurds Baluchs Lurs Turkamans Arabs as well as tribes such as Ghasghaie and Bakhtiari linguistic dialogic background Persian Azari Gialki Mazandarani Kurdish Arabic and others Cultural religious and political and various other differences among Iranians reflect their diverse social and interpersonal interactions Some studies suggest that despite the existence of subgroup within Iranian immigrants e g various ethno religious groups their nationality as Iranians has been an important point of reference and identifiable source of their identification as a group across time and setting Yarshater Ehsan Persia or Iran Persian or Farsi Archived 24 October 2010 at the Wayback Machine Iranian Studies vol XXII no 1 1989 Majd Hooman The Ayatollah Begs to Differ The Paradox of Modern Iran by Hooman Majd Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group 23 September 2008 ISBN 0385528426 9780385528429 p 161 Frye Richard Nelson 2005 Greater Iran A 20th century Odyssey Mazda ISBN 9781568591773 Retrieved 21 December 2016 a b c d Bozorgmehr Mehdi 2009 Iran In Mary C Waters Reed Ueda Helen B Marrow eds The New Americans A Guide to Immigration since 1965 Harvard University Press p 469 ISBN 978 0 674 04493 7 Cornell Svante E 20 May 2015 Azerbaijan Since Independence Routledge p 7 ISBN 978 1 317 47621 4 West Barbara A 1 January 2009 Encyclopedia of the Peoples of Asia and Oceania Infobase Publishing p 68 ISBN 978 1 4381 1913 7 Minahan James 1 January 2002 Encyclopedia of the Stateless Nations S Z Greenwood Publishing Group p 1766 ISBN 978 0 313 32384 3 Elizabeth Chacko Contemporary ethnic geographies in America Ines M Miyares Christopher A Airriess eds Rowman amp Littlefield 2007 pp 325 326 Collins English Dictionary Complete amp Unabridged 11th Edition Collinsdictionary com Retrieved 4 September 2012 Definition of Persian Collins English Dictionary Retrieved 12 January 2016 Bakalian 1993 p 33 Papazian Dennis 2000 Armenians in America Journal of Eastern Christian Studies 52 3 4 311 347 doi 10 2143 JECS 52 3 565605 Archived from the original on 29 October 2014 Retrieved 29 August 2018 a b The First Iranian American Paaia Retrieved 25 April 2015 a b c d e f g Bayor 2011 p 1076 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Iranian Americans immigration and assimilation PDF PAAIA Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 7 January 2016 Bozorgmehr amp Sabagh p 8 a b Bayor 2011 p 1077 Torbat Akbar E Spring 2002 The brain drain from Iran to the United States Middle East Journal 56 2 272 295 a b Hakimzadeh Shirin Dixon David 1 June 2006 Spotlight on the Iranian Foreign Born Migration Information Migration Policy Institute Retrieved 15 February 2010 The exiles were disproportionately members of religious and ethnic minorities such as the Bahai is Jews Armenians and Assyrians Also in the second wave were young men who fled military service and the Iran Iraq war followed by young women and families who came for educational and political reasons 1980 US Census No 48 Population by Selected Ancestry Group and Region PDF United States Census Bureau 1980 p 42 Retrieved 16 January 2016 Malekzadeh Shervin 10 December 2019 What It Means to Be Iranian in America Foreign Affairs America and the World ISSN 0015 7120 Retrieved 2 November 2020 Bayor 2011 p 1078 Profile of Selected Demographic and Social Characteristics 2000 Population Universe People Born in Iran PDF United States Census Bureau Retrieved 15 January 2016 a b Ancestry 2000 United States Census Bureau Retrieved 17 December 2012 a b c d Bahareh H Lampert Voices of New American Women Visions of Home in the Middle Eastern Diasporic Imagination page 50 2008 ISBN 978 0 549 63520 8 a b Katzman Kenneth 29 December 2015 Iran Gulf Security and U S P olicy PDF Congressional Research Service Report Retrieved 7 January 2016 a b Paul Harvey Edward Blum The Columbia Guide to Religion in American History page 368 Columbia University Press 14 February 2012 ISBN 978 0 231 14020 1 a b Reinl James Iranian Americans bank on historic nuclear deal Al Jazeera Retrieved 7 January 2016 a b Yeganeh Torbati Iranian Americans forge a rare bond to support nuclear deal Reuters Retrieved 7 January 2016 PAAIA Demographics amp Statistics Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans Retrieved 16 January 2016 a b Ronald H Bayor Multicultural America An Encyclopedia of the Newest Americans ABC CLIO 2011 ISBN 978 0 313 35787 9 page 1080 a b Esfandiari Golnaz The U S Election s Iranian American Vote What s It Look Like The Atlantic Retrieved 7 January 2016 a b Fata Soraya Rafii Raha September 2003 Strength in Numbers The Relative Concentration of Iranian Americans Across the United States PDF National Iranian American Council Report p 4 Archived from the original PDF on 15 February 2020 Retrieved 20 March 2022 The numbers are partially based on p 37 of The Iranian Diaspora Challenges Negotiations and Transformations by M Mobasher University of Texas Press 2018 ISBN 1477316647 Community Facts United States Census Bureau Retrieved 29 January 2018 The Iranians Count Census Coalition Releases the Special Tabulation Results from the 2010 U S Census Payvand com Iranian Studies Group آمار پراکندگی ایرانیان مقیم خارج از کشور نمودار Iranian Americans and the 2010 Census Did We Shrink by Hossein Hosseini Payvand com Kessler James S 2005 Iranians Encyclopedia chicagohistory org Retrieved 12 January 2016 Ancestry Maps ePodunk Archived from the original on 12 April 2018 Retrieved 4 September 2019 Iranian Americans gain political clout in Great Neck peninsula as demographics shift Newsday a b c Ansari Azadeh 16 June 2009 Iranian Americans cast ballots on Iran s future CNN Retrieved 15 February 2010 The Wall Street Journal Iran s Political Crisis Fuels Expatriates Fears Hopes a b c d e f g h Hassanpour Amir 1996 Review of The Making of Exile Cultures Iranian Television in Los Angeles Iranian Studies 29 3 4 378 381 doi 10 1017 S0021086200010847 ISSN 0021 0862 JSTOR 4311007 S2CID 245655342 Iranians at odds over talks with the Great Satan The Sunday Telegraph London 4 June 2006 Archived from the original on 26 February 2008 Retrieved 5 May 2010 a b c d Naficy Hamid 1993 From Broadcasting to Narrowcasting Middle Eastern Diaspora in Los Angeles Middle East Report 180 31 34 doi 10 2307 3013230 ISSN 0899 2851 JSTOR 3013230 via JSTOR Bakalian 1993 p 16 Universe Total population more information 2006 2010 American Community Survey 5 Year Estimates Archived 12 February 2020 at archive today factfinder2 census gov Los Angeles Times Irvine embraces diversity at the polls 9 November 2008 a b 2011 Language Mapper Tarzana Mapping L A MAPPING L A Neighborhoods LA Times Osborne Lawrence Iranians settle on Girard Avenue to show carpets San Diego Reader Mayor makes history Daily News 27 March 2007 Mobasher M Iranians in Texas Migration Politics and Ethnic Identity University of Texas Press 2012 ISBN 0292742827 Cook Alison 15 September 1994 Touring Little Persia Houston Press Retrieved 4 September 2019 Cook Allison Touring Little Persia Houston Press 15 September 1994 p 1 Retrieved on 12 May 2014 Fischer and Abedi p 269 Rustomji p 249 Karkabi Barbara Bahai Faith adherents value unity education Houston Chronicle 11 November 2006 Houston Belief Retrieved on 3 May 2014 Shellnutt Kate Local Baha is pray for jailed leaders in Iran Archived 3 May 2014 at the Wayback Machine Houston Chronicle 8 February 2010 Retrieved on 3 May 2014 This aircraft carrier skipper fled Iran as a child Now he s preparing to deploy amid heightened tensions Founders Art of the Islamic World at the Museum of Fine Arts Houston Retrieved 4 September 2019 A 1 Million Gift Plus 4 Million in Jewelry and a Horde of Priceless Persian Art This Islamic Worlds Affair is the Richest Gala Ever 22 November 2017 Story Bush Library 20th Anniversary Exhibit Lead by Example George H W Bush Library Center Kriel Lomi 6 August 2012 Still no answers 6 months after Iranian student s killing Houston Chronicle Retrieved 10 September 2018 Rogers Brian 14 August 2018 Jury delivers death sentence for Jordanian immigrant convicted of two Houston area honor killings Houston Chronicle Retrieved 9 September 2018 TANGLED WEB Sorting out the timeline of the so called Houston honor killings KTRK TV 25 June 2018 Retrieved 9 September 2018 Rogers Brian 18 June 2018 Wife testifies her husband confessed to pulling the trigger in one of two Houston area honor killings Houston Chronicle Retrieved 9 September 2018 Iranian community in North Texas PDF Texas Baptists Intercultural Ministry Retrieved 4 September 2019 Trump administration opposes military intervention in Iran 21 April 2019 Pompeo privately said Trump administration will not pursue military intervention in Iran Report 21 April 2019 Iranian refugees seeking to settle in San Antonio have detoured into limbo 4 March 2018 We are not others San Antonio is their home 2 July 2016 The Storm over the Shah TIME 14 February 2008 Archived from the original on 14 February 2008 Multicultural America A Multimedia Encyclopedia Volume 1 SAGE Publications 2013 ISBN 9781452276267 Islam gains about as many converts as it loses in U S Public Opinion Survey of Iranian Americans PDF PAAIA December 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 21 December 2008 Losing Our Religion The Growth of The Nones NPR 13 January 2013 Archived from the original on 15 January 2013 Social Movements in 20th Century Iran Culture Ideology and Mobilizing Frameworks Lexington Books 2005 ISBN 9780739117576 Mostofi Nilou 2003 Who We Are The Perplexity of Iranian American Identity The Sociological Quarterly 44 4 681 703 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 618 7415 doi 10 1111 j 1533 8525 2003 tb00531 x JSTOR 4120728 S2CID 145195478 Mobasher Mohsen 1 September 2006 Cultural Trauma and Ethnic Identity Formation Among Iranian Immigrants in the United States American Behavioral Scientist 50 100 117 doi 10 1177 0002764206289656 S2CID 145633929 Iranian Studies Group at MIT Iranian American Community Survey Results 2005 Web mit edu Archived from the original on 25 November 2011 Retrieved 28 November 2011 Obama administration granted citizenship to 2 500 Iranians during nuclear deal Iran official Fox News 28 June 2018 a b c d e 2008 National Survey of Iranian Americans PDF PAAIA December 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 12 January 2016 PAAIA Releases 2011 National Survey of Iranian Americans Payvand com 7 December 2011 Ariosto David 21 July 2008 Iranian American youth struggle to define themselves CNN Retrieved 13 June 2019 Tina Pak From Tehran to Camp Ayandeh Payvand com Retrieved 13 June 2019 a b Bayor 2011 p 1081 Sabagh Bozorgmehr amp Der Martirosian 1990 p 9 Reinhold Robert 21 March 1988 Echoes From Armenia in Southern California The New York Times Retrieved 3 December 2012 Parks Lisa Kumar Shanti 2003 Planet TV a global television reader New York New York University Press p 395 ISBN 978 0 8147 6692 7 Samkian 2007 p 102 SBA Report Iranian Americans with one of highest rates of immigrant owned businesses Payvand com 22 November 2006 Retrieved 15 February 2010 Public Opinion Survey of Iranian Americans PDF Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans December 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 5 March 2009 Retrieved 20 March 2022 39 Ronaghy HA Williams KN Baker TD Emigration of Iranian Physicians to the United States A Ten Year Follow up of Graduates of Shiraz Medical School Pahlavi Med J 1973 4 174 193 Ronaghy HA Shajari A Islamic Revolution and Physician Migration Archive of Iranian Medicine 2013 16 10 Ronaghy HA Cahill K Baker TD Physician Migration to the United States One Country s Transfusion is Another Country s Hemorrhage J Am Med Assoc 1974 227 538 542 McIntosh Phyllis Iranian Americans Reported Among Most Highly Educated in U S IIP Digital State Department s Bureau of International Information Programs Retrieved 25 April 2015 Bahrampour Tara 3 November 2003 Persia on the Pacific The New Yorker The Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans National Opinion Survey 2019 PDF PAAIA August 2019 Retrieved 7 December 2020 a b c d The Public Affairs Alliance of Iranian Americans National Opinion Survey 2019 PDF PAAIA August 2019 Retrieved 7 December 2020 Executive Order 13769 of January 27 2017 Protecting the Nation From Foreign Terrorist Entry Into the United States Executive Office of the President 82 FR 8977 8982 February 1 2017 a b PAAIA Releases 2009 National Survey of Iranian Americans Payvand com Retrieved 15 February 2010 Alavi Farhad R 31 December 2010 How U S Laws Can Affect Your Personal Affairs in Iran Payvand com Retrieved 12 January 2016 Cullis Tyler 4 April 2014 Banks Targeting Iranian Americans What Are Your Rights Payvand com Retrieved 12 January 2016 a b c Iran Travel Warning travel state gov Retrieved 19 December 2016 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Mapping LA Neighborhoods Los Angeles Times Peisner David 23 October 2018 How Dara Khosrowshahi s Iranian heritage shapes how he leads Uber Fast Company Brin Stan Persian POWER MIT Iranian Americans Among Most Highly Educated in U S and contribute substantially to the U S economy Chiland Elijah 5 July 2017 Century City Freedom Sculpture unveiled on Santa Monica Boulevard median Curbed a b c Parks Lisa Kumar Shanti 2003 Planet TV A Global Television Reader NYU Press pp 385 400 ISBN 978 0 8147 6691 0 Bagherpour Amir 12 September 2010 The Iranian Diaspora in America 30 Years in the Making Frontline PBS KQED Retrieved 9 February 2022 a b Naficy Hamid 16 September 2011 A Social History of Iranian Cinema Volume 1 The Artisanal Era 1897 1941 Duke University Press p 57 ISBN 978 0 8223 4775 0 Naficy Hamid 1 January 1993 The Making of Exile Cultures Iranian Television in Los Angeles University of Minnesota Press p 242 ISBN 978 0 8166 2084 5 Tabatabai Behzad 2021 The Passing of Parviz Kardan a pioneer of Iranian stage screen and t farhang org Farhang Foundation Retrieved 9 February 2022 Gustave E von Grunebaum Center for Near Eastern Studies 1 January 1993 Irangeles Iranians in Los Angeles University of California Press p 363 ISBN 978 0 520 08008 9 Retrieved 20 March 2022 Piazza Jo 26 March 2015 Iranian American petitioners call Bravo s The Shahs of Sunset racist Fox News Retrieved 25 March 2022 Maghbouleh Neda 1 December 2012 Shahs of Sunset The real Iranians of Los Angeles Salon Retrieved 25 March 2022 Stueven Michele 16 June 2020 Trailer Padma Lakshmi Explores L A s Persian Square in Taste The Nation June 18 on Hulu LA Weekly Retrieved 11 May 2023 Padma Lakshmi s new show is a celebration of immigrants lives and food in US KCRW Retrieved 11 May 2023 Chron Emma Balter 26 June 2020 What is American food Padma Lakshmi s new show Taste the Nation offers answers Houston Chronicle Retrieved 11 May 2023 Wiegand David 15 December 2012 The Iranian Americans review It s a start SFGATE Retrieved 4 February 2022 The Iranian Americans KPBS Public Media 7 January 2013 Retrieved 4 February 2022 Film screening Immigrant Stories Iranian Americans of Silicon Valley Iranian Studies Stanford University Retrieved 4 February 2022 Feelings of Marginalization by the PBS Documentary Iranian Americans HuffPost 3 January 2013 Retrieved 4 February 2022 Kompanek Christopher 12 May 2016 Jimmy Vestvood Amerikan Hero aims for sharp satire and misses The Washington Post Archived from the original on 1 December 2017 Retrieved 4 February 2022 Shirin in Love Film Review The Hollywood Reporter 13 March 2014 Retrieved 4 February 2022 Hagopian Kevin How Iranian filmmakers like Asghar Farhadi defy the censors The Conversation Retrieved 4 February 2022 a b Trent Paisley Center for Iranian Diaspora Studies hopes to expand with 1 million donation Golden Gate Xpress Retrieved 4 February 2022 Shirazi Ziba Afary Kamran 15 June 2020 Iranian Diaspora Identities Stories and Songs Rowman amp Littlefield p 5 ISBN 978 0 7618 7171 2 Bilingual Lecture Series on Iran educates connects Iranian diaspora Daily Bruin 16 November 2021 Retrieved 4 February 2022 Mojadad Ida 21 March 2019 We Are Here We Have Always Been Here SF Weekly Retrieved 4 February 2022 Brin Stan 8 July 2004 Persian Power OC Metro Archived from the original on 28 March 2015 Myth vs Fact Persians and Arabs American Iranian Council 2 November 2016 Disney Patrick 26 March 2010 Amanpour is Being Attacked Because She s Iranian Payvand News Merrill Lynch to Pay 1 55 Million for Job Bias Against Former Iranian Worker PAAIA 31 December 2008 Retrieved 9 September 2020 Fausto Alma Emrey Sean 8 February 2020 White supremacist who fatally stabbed Iranian American man at California bar gets 56 years to life Orange County Register Retrieved 5 October 2020 Yee Christopher 11 September 2015 Laguna Niguel man slain in bar stabbing remembered as old soul Orange County Register Retrieved 5 October 2020 Ludwig Ashley 6 September 2018 Woman Charged As Accessory To Murder Of Shayan Mazroei Los Alamitos Seal Beach CA Patch Retrieved 9 September 2020 Suspect apparently thought he shot Iranian people in Kansas bar attack that killed Indian man Los Angeles Times 28 February 2017 Watkins Eli 16 October 2018 Graham says it would be terrible if DNA showed he has Iranian heritage CNN O Brien Sara Ashley 17 October 2018 Tech execs want Senator Graham to apologize over Iranian remark CNN Esfandiari Golnaz 18 October 2018 Iranian Americans Call Out U S Senator Graham For Terrible Ancestry Gaffe Radio Free Europe Radio Liberty Retrieved 3 May 2019 Baker Mike 5 January 2020 U S Stops Dozens of Iranian Americans Returning From Canada The New York Times Retrieved 13 February 2020 Iranian Studies Group at MIT Isg mit org Retrieved 15 February 2010 The Iranian Americans Pbs Socal 2015 Archived from the original on 6 March 2016 Retrieved 12 January 2016 30th Anniversary corporate document 1970s Defying Conventional Wisdom PDF Oracle Corporation 26 May 2007 p 1 Retrieved 29 February 2016 Leadership Team 1 November 2013 Forbes list Southwest Florida has a new billionaire others move up Naples Daily News Retrieved 8 April 2023 Profile of an Iranian American philanthropist Ali Saberioon Payvand com Retrieved 28 November 2011 Title M D Anderson Cancer Center Mdanderson org 22 April 2009 Archived from the original on 13 December 2007 Retrieved 28 November 2011 Mankin Eric 23 November 2011 Alum Gives 17M to USC Viterbi Dept Usc edu Archived from the original on 10 December 2011 Retrieved 28 November 2011 SF State News Sfsu edu 1 June 2005 Retrieved 28 November 2011 Archive Pages Iranian com 9 April 2007 Retrieved 28 November 2011 Visionary Alumnus Makes Investment Portland State Maseeh College of Engineering amp Computer Science 2004 Archived from the original on 26 August 2007 University of California Irvine The Paul Merage School of Business Merage uci edu Archived from the original on 26 February 2008 Retrieved 28 November 2011 Archive Pages Iranian com 24 April 2005 Retrieved 28 November 2011 Gowing Liam 2 March 2006 In later years he moved Memphis Tennessee to pursue his music career However this was unsuccessful His son has got him covered System of a Down s artist of choice is Vartan Malakian the guitarist s dad Los Angeles Times Retrieved 27 July 2010 Savoir Faire Music Boston savoirfaireband Retrieved 1 August 2021 Living in Tehrangeles L A s Iranian Community NPR org NPR Retrieved 28 November 2011 Kasindorf Martin 14 March 2007 Beverly Hills will have first Iranian born mayor in USA USA Today Archived from the original on 6 October 2008 Retrieved 5 May 2010 Zendrian Alexandra 9 November 2011 Kaplan Wins North Hempstead Town Council Race Port Washington NY Patch Portwashington patch com Archived from the original on 24 April 2012 Retrieved 28 November 2011 White House Hosts Iranian American Community Leaders for Roundtable Discussion Payvand com Stephanie Bice Iranian American Political Action Committee IAPAC www iranianamericanpac org Archived from the original on 4 December 2020 Retrieved 12 November 2020 Journal A B A Meet 3 female human rights lawyers fighting for change worldwide ABA Journal Sources editBakalian Anny 1993 Armenian Americans From Being to Feeling Armenian New Brunswick New Jersey Transaction Publishers ISBN 978 1 56000 025 9 Bayor Ronald H 2011 Multicultural America An Encyclopedia of the Newest Americans ABC CLIO ISBN 978 0 313 35787 9 Bozorgmehr Mehdi Sabagh Georges 1988 High Status Immigrants A Statistical Profile of Iranians in the United States Iranian Studies Sabagh Georges Bozorgmehr Mehdi Der Martirosian Claudia 1990 Subethnicity Armenians in Los Angeles Institute for Social Science Research University of California Los Angeles Samkian Artineh 2007 Constructing Identities Perceiving Lives Armenian High School Students Perceptions of Identity and Education ISBN 978 0 549 48257 4 Further reading editHollie Pamela G 9 December 1979 Iranian Immigrants Totaling Perhaps a Million Bring Wealth and Diversity to the U S Perhaps a Million in the U S The New York Times p 16 ISSN 0362 4331 Ansari Maboud 1993 The Making of the Iranian Community in America Pardis Press ISBN 978 0963260000 Kelley Ron Friedlander Jonathan Colby Anita eds 1993 Irangeles Iranians in Los Angeles Gustave E von Grunebaum Center for Near Eastern Studies and International Studies and Overseas Programs at University of California Los Angeles University of California Press ISBN 9780520080089 Nigem Elias T Summer 1994 The Making of the Iranian Community in America International Migration Review SAGE Publications Inc 28 2 via Gale Academic OneFile Farnia Nina 1 August 2011 Law s Inhumanities Peripheral Racialization and the Early Development of an Iranian Race Comparative Studies of South Asia Africa and the Middle East 31 2 455 473 doi 10 1215 1089201X 1264352 S2CID 143607791 Iranian Americans Gale Encyclopedia of Multicultural America edited by Thomas Riggs 3rd ed vol 2 Gale 2014 pp 433 443 Online Nanquette Laetitia 2016 Translations of modern Persian literature in the United States 1979 2011 The Translator 23 1 49 66 doi 10 1080 13556509 2016 1227530 S2CID 152171897 Maghbouleh Neda 2017 The Limits of Whiteness Iranian Americans and the Everyday Politics of Race Stanford University Press ISBN 9781503603370 Yaghoobi Claudia 2021 Racial Profiling of Iranian Armenians in the United States Omid Fallahazad s Citizen Vartgez Iran Namag 6 2 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Iranian Americans Iranian American Organizations comprehensive list Iranian American workers by occupation 2009 New York Times Iran Census Report 2003 Strength in Numbers Archived 5 January 2019 at the Wayback Machine The Relative Concentration of Iranian Americans Across the United States Fact sheet on the Iranian American Community ISG MIT Migration Information Source Spotlight on the Iranian Foreign Born Interest Section of the Islamic Republic of Iran in Washington D C Archived 20 March 2015 at the Wayback Machine Consular affairs videos Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Iranian Americans amp oldid 1207693233, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.