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Shirin Ebadi

Shirin Ebadi (Persian: شيرين عبادى, romanizedŠirin Ebādi; born 21 June 1947) is an Iranian Nobel laureate, lawyer, writer, teacher and a former judge and founder of the Defenders of Human Rights Center in Iran. In 2003, Ebadi was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for her pioneering efforts for democracy and women's, children's, and refugee rights. She was the first Muslim woman and the first Iranian to receive the award.[4]

Shirin Ebadi
شيرين عبادى
Ebadi in 2017
Born (1947-06-21) 21 June 1947 (age 76)[1]
NationalityIranian[2]
Alma materUniversity of Tehran[3]
Occupations
  • Lawyer
  • judge
Known forDefenders of Human Rights Center
AwardsRafto Prize (2001)
Nobel Peace Prize (2003)
JPM Interfaith Award (2004)
Legion of Honour (2006)
Signature

She has lived in exile in London since 2009.[5]

Life and early career as a judge edit

Ebadi was born in Hamadan into an educated Persian family. Her father, Mohammad Ali Ebadi, was the city's chief notary public and a professor of commercial law. Her mother, Minu Yamini,[6] was a homemaker. When she was an infant, her family moved to Tehran. Before earning a law degree from the University of Tehran Ebadi attended Anoshiravn Dadgar and Reza Shah Kabir schools.[7]

She was admitted to the law department of the University of Tehran in 1965 and 1969; upon graduation, she passed the qualification exams to become a judge. After a six-month internship period[inconsistent], she officially became a judge in March 1969. She continued her studies at the University of Tehran to pursue a doctorate in law; in 1971, one of her professors was Mahmoud Shehabi Khorassani. In 1975, she became the first female president of the Tehran city court and served until the Iranian Revolution.[8] She was one of the first female judges in Iran.[9][8][10]

After the 1979 Revolution women were no longer allowed to serve as judges and she was dismissed and given a new job as a clerk in the court she had presided over.[11]

Later, despite already having a law office permit her applications were repeatedly rejected, and Ebadi was unable to practice law until 1993. She used this free time to write books and many articles in Iranian periodicals.[3]

Ebadi as a lawyer edit

 
Shirin Ebadi at WSIS press conference

By 2004, Ebadi was lecturing law at the University of Tehran while practicing law in Iran.[8] She is a campaigner for strengthening the legal status of children and women, and her work on women's rights played a key role in the May 1997 landslide presidential election of the reformist Mohammad Khatami.

As a lawyer, she is known for taking up pro bono cases of dissident figures who have fallen foul of the judiciary. Among her clients were the family of Dariush Forouhar, a dissident intellectual and politician who was found stabbed to death -- along with his wife, Parvaneh Eskandari -- in their home.

The couple was among several dissidents who died in a spate of gruesome murders that terrorized Iran's intellectual community. Suspicion fell on extremist hard-liners determined to stop the more liberal climate fostered by President Khatami, who championed freedom of speech. The murders were found to be committed by a team of employees of the Iranian Ministry of Intelligence, whose head, Saeed Emami, allegedly committed suicide in jail before being brought to court.

Ebadi also represented the family of Ezzat Ebrahim-Nejad, who was killed in the Iranian student protests in July 1999. In 2000 Ebadi was accused of manipulating the videotaped confession of Amir Farshad Ebrahimi, a former member of the Ansar-e Hezbollah. Ebrahimi confessed his involvement in attacks by the organization on the orders of high-level conservative authorities, including the killing of Ezzat Ebrahim-Nejad and attacks against members of President Khatami's cabinet. Ebadi claimed that she had only videotaped Amir Farshad Ebrahimi's confessions to present them to the court. This case was named "Tape makers" by hardliners who questioned the credibility of his videotaped deposition and his motives. Ebadi and another lawyer, Rohami were sentenced to five years in jail and suspension of their law licenses for sending Ebrahimi's videotaped deposition to President Khatami and the head of the Islamic judiciary. The Islamic judiciary's supreme court later vacated the sentences, but they did not forgive Ebarahimi's videotaped confession and sentenced him to 48 months in jail, including 16 months in solitary confinement.[12][13][14] This case brought an increased focus on Iran from human rights groups abroad.

Ebadi has also defended various child abuse cases, including the case of Arian Golshani,[15] a child who was abused for years and then beaten to death by her father and stepbrother. This case gained international attention and caused controversy in Iran. Ebadi used this case to highlight Iran's problematic child custody laws, whereby custody of children in divorce is usually given to the father, even in the case of Arian, where her mother had told the court that the father was abusive and had begged for custody of her daughter. Ebadi also handled the case of Leila, a teenage girl who was gang-raped and murdered. Leila's family became homeless, trying to cover the costs of the execution of the perpetrators owed to the government because, in the Islamic Republic of Iran, it is the victim's family's responsibility to pay to restore their honor when a girl is raped by paying the government to execute the perpetrator. Ebadi was not able to achieve victory in this case. Still, she brought international attention to this problematic law.[16] Ebadi also handled a few cases dealing with bans of periodicals (including the cases of Habibollah Peyman, Abbas Marufi, and Faraj Sarkouhi). She has also established two non-governmental organizations in Iran with Western funding, the Society for Protecting the Rights of the Child (SPRC) (1994) and the Defenders of Human Rights Center (DHRC) in 2001.[9][12]

She also helped in the drafting of the original text of a law against physical abuse of children, which was passed by the Iranian parliament in 2002. Female members of Parliament also asked Ebadi to draft a law explaining how a woman's right to divorce her husband is in line with Sharia (Islamic Law). Ebadi presented the bill before the government, but the male members made her leave without considering the bill, according to Ebadi's memoir.[16]

Political views edit

In her book Iran Awakening, Ebadi explains her political/religious views on Islam, democracy and gender equality:

In the last 23 years, from the day I was stripped of my judgeship to the years of doing battle in the revolutionary courts of Tehran, I had repeated one refrain: an interpretation of Islam that is in harmony with equality and democracy is an authentic expression of faith. Not religion binds women, but the selective dictates of those who wish them cloistered. That belief and the conviction that change in Iran must come peacefully and from within has underpinned my work.[17]

At the same time, Ebadi expresses a nationalist love of Iran and has criticized the policies and actions of Western countries. She opposed the pro-Western Shah, initially supported the Islamic Revolution, and remembers the CIA's 1953 overthrow of prime minister Mohammad Mosaddeq with rage.[18]

At a press conference shortly after the Peace Prize announcement, Ebadi explicitly rejected foreign interference in the country's affairs: "The fight for human rights is conducted in Iran by the Iranian people, and we are against any foreign intervention in Iran."[19][20]

Subsequently, Ebadi openly defended the Islamic regime's nuclear development program:

Aside from being economically justified, it has become a cause of national pride for an old nation with a glorious history. No Iranian government, regardless of its ideology or democratic credentials, would dare to stop the program.[21]

However, in a 2012 interview, Ebadi stated:

The [Iranian] people want to stop enrichment, but the government doesn't listen. Iran is situated on a fault line, and people are scared of a Fukushima type of situation happening. We want peace, security, and economic welfare, and we cannot forgo all of our other rights for nuclear energy. The government claims it is not making a bomb. But I am not a member of the government, so I cannot speak to this directly. The fear is that if they do, Israel will be wiped out. If the Iranian people are able to topple the government, this could improve the situation. [In 2009] the people of Iran rose up and were badly suppressed. Right now, Iran is the country with the most journalists in prison. This is the price people are paying.[22]

Concerning the Israeli–Palestinian conflict, in 2010, Shirin Ebadi, was one of four Peace Prize laureates supporting legislation requiring the University of California to divest itself from any companies providing technology to the Israel Defense Forces, who (bill supporters declared) were engaged in war crimes. (The legislation was supported by the Associated Students of the University of California).[23]


Since the victory of Hassan Rouhani in the 2013 Iranian presidential election, Shirin Ebadi has expressed her worry about the growing human rights violations in her homeland. Ebadi, in her Dec. 2013 speech at Human Rights Day seminar at Leiden University angrily said: "I will shut up, but the problems of Iran will not be solved".[24]

In April 2015, speaking on the subject of the Western campaign against the Sunni extremist group ISIL in Syria and Iraq, Ebadi expressed her desire that the Western world spend money funding education and an end to corruption rather than fighting with guns and bombs. She reasoned that because the Islamic State stems from an ideology based on a "wrong interpretation of Islam", the physical force will not end ISIS because it will not end its beliefs.[25]

In 2018, in an interview with Bloomberg, Ebadi stated her belief that the Islamic Republic has reached a point of which it is now un-reformable. Ebadi called for a referendum on the Islamic Republic.[26]

Nobel Peace Prize edit

On 10 October 2003, Ebadi was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for her efforts for democracy and human rights, especially for the rights of women and children.[2] The selection committee praised her as a "courageous person" who "has never heeded the threat to her own safety".[27] Now she travels abroad lecturing in the West. She is against a policy of forced regime change.[28]

The decision of the Nobel committee surprised some observers[who?] worldwide. Pope John Paul II had been predicted to win the Peace Prize amid speculation that he was nearing death. The era in which her prize was granted has been called one "when there still seemed a chance of something resembling a détente" between the U.S. and Iran (according to Associate Press).[29]

She presented a book entitled Democracy, human rights, and Islam in modern Iran: Psychological, social and cultural perspectives to the Nobel Committee. The volume documents the historical and cultural basis of democracy and human rights from Cyrus and Darius, 2,500 years ago to Mohammad Mossadeq, the prime minister of modern Iran who nationalized the oil industry.

In her acceptance speech, Ebad criticized repression in Iran and insisted that Islam was compatible with democracy, human rights and freedom of opinion.[28] In the same speech she also criticized US foreign policy, particularly the War on terrorism.[28] She was the first Iranian and the first Muslim woman to receive the prize.[9]

Thousands greeted her at the airport when she returned from Paris after receiving the news that she had won the prize. The response to the Award in Iran was mixed—enthusiastic supporters greeted her at the airport upon her return, the conservative media underplayed it, and then-Iranian President Mohammad Khatami criticized it as political.[30][16] In Iran, officials of the Islamic Republic were either silent or critical of the selection of Ebadi, calling it a political act by a pro-Western institution and were also critical when Ebadi did not cover her hair at the Nobel award ceremony.[31] IRNA reported the Nobel committee's decision in few lines that the evening newspapers and the Iranian state media waited hours to report —and then only as the last item on the radio news update.[32] Reformist officials are said to have "generally welcomed the award", but "come under attack for doing so."[33] Reformist president Mohammad Khatami did not officially congratulate Ms. Ebadi and stated that although the scientific Nobels are important, the Peace Prize is "not very important" and was awarded to Ebadi on the basis of "totally political criteria".[33] Vice President Mohammad Ali Abtahi, the only official to initially congratulate Ebadi, defended the president saying "abusing the President's words about Ms. Ebadi is tantamount to abusing the prize bestowed on her for political considerations".[citation needed]

In 2009, Norway's Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Støre, published a statement reporting that Ebadi's Nobel Peace Prize had been confiscated by Iranian authorities and that "This [was] the first time a Nobel Peace Prize ha[d] been confiscated by national authorities."[34] Iran denied the charges.[35][36]

Post-Nobel prize edit

 
UK Foreign Office Minister Alistair Burt meeting Ebadi in London, 3 February 2011

Since receiving the Nobel Prize, Ebadi has lectured, taught and received awards in different countries, issued statements and defended people accused of political crimes in Iran. She has traveled to and spoken to audiences in India, the United States, and other countries; released her autobiography in an English translation. With five other Nobel laureates, she created the Nobel Women's Initiative to promote peace, justice, and equality for women.[3] In 2019, Ebadi called for a treaty to end violence against women, in support of Every Woman Coalition.[37]

Threats edit

In April 2008, she told Reuters news agency that Iran's human rights record had regressed in the past two years[38] and agreed to defend Baháʼís arrested in Iran in May 2008.

In April 2008, Ebadi released a statement saying: "Threats against my life and security and those of my family, which began some time ago, have intensified", and that the threats warned her against making speeches abroad and to stop defending Iran's persecuted Baháʼí community.[39] In August 2008, the IRNA news agency published an article attacking Ebadi's links to the Baháʼí Faith and accused her of seeking support from the West. It also criticized Ebadi for defending homosexuals, appearing without the Islamic headscarf abroad, questioning Islamic punishments, and "defending CIA agents".[40] It accused her daughter, Nargess Tavassolian, of conversion to the Baháʼí faith, a capital offense in the Islamic Republic. However Shirin Ebadi has denied it, saying, "I am proud to say that my family and I are Shiites,"[41] Her daughter believes "the government wanted to scare my mother with this scenario." Ebadi believes the attacks are in retaliation for her agreeing to defend the families of the seven Baháʼís arrested in May.[42]

In December 2008, Iranian police shut down the office of a human rights group led by her.[43] Another human rights group, Human Rights Watch, has said it was "extremely worried" about Ebadi's safety.,[44] and in December 2009 issued a statement demanding the Islamic Republic "stop harassing" her.[45] Among many other complaints, the group accused the IRI of detaining "Ebadi's husband and sister for questioning and threatened them with losing their jobs and eventual arrest if Ebadi continues her human rights advocacy."[45]

Seizure edit

Ebadi said while in London in late November 2009 that her Nobel Peace Prize medal and diploma had been taken from their bank box alongside her Légion d'honneur and a ring she had received from Germany's association of journalists.[46] She said they had been taken by the Revolutionary Court approximately three weeks previously.[46][47][48] Ebadi also said her bank account was frozen by authorities.[46][49][50] Norwegian Minister of Foreign Affairs Jonas Gahr Støre expressed his "shock and disbelief" at the incident.[46] The Iranian foreign ministry subsequently denied the confiscation, and also criticized Norway for interfering in Iran's affairs.[51][52]

Post-Nobel Prize timeline edit

 
Shirin Ebadi during a lecture – organized by University of Amsterdam, 7 November 2011
  • 2003 (November) – She declared that she would provide legal representation for the family of the murdered Canadian freelance photographer Zahra Kazemi.[53] The trial was halted in July 2004, prompting Ebadi and her team to leave the court in protest that their witnesses had not been heard.[54]
  • 2004 (January) – During the World Social Forum in Bombay Ebadi, speaking at a small girls' school run by the NGO "Sahyog", proposed that 30 January (the day Mahatma Gandhi was assassinated) be observed as International Day of Non-Violence. This proposal was brought to her by school children in Paris by their Indian teacher Akshay Bakaya. Three years later, Sonia Gandhi and Archbishop Desmond Tutu relayed the idea at the Delhi Satyagraha Convention in January 2007, preferring however to propose Gandhi's birthday on 2 October. The UN General Assembly on 15 June 2007 adopted 2 October as the International Day of Non-Violence.
  • 2004 – Ebadi was listed by Forbes magazine as one of the "100 most powerful women in the world".[55] She is also included in a published list of the "100 most influential women of all time".[56]
  • 2005 Spring – Ebadi taught a course on "Islam and Human Rights" at the University of Arizona's James E. Rogers College of Law in Tucson, Arizona.
  • 2005 (12 May) – Ebadi delivered an address on Senior Class Day at Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee. Vanderbilt Chancellor Gordon Gee presented Ebadi with the Chancellor's Medal for her human rights work.[57]
  • 2005 – Ebadi was voted the world's 12th leading public intellectual in The 2005 Global Intellectuals Poll by Prospect (UK).
  • 2006 – Random House released her first book for a Western audience, Iran Awakening: A Memoir of Revolution and Hope, with Azadeh Moaveni. A reading of the book was serialized as BBC Radio 4's Book of the Week in September 2006. American novelist David Ebershoff was the book's editor.
  • 2006 – Ebadi was one of the founders of The Nobel Women's Initiative along with sister Nobel Peace laureates Betty Williams, Mairead Corrigan Maguire, Wangari Maathai, Jody Williams and Rigoberta Menchú Tum. Six women representing North America and South America, Europe, the Middle East and Africa decided to bring together their experiences in a united effort for peace with justice and equality. The Nobel Women's Initiative aims to help strengthen work being done in support of women's rights worldwide.[58]
  • 2007 (17 May) – Ebadi announced that she would defend the Iranian American scholar Haleh Esfandiari, who is jailed in Tehran.[59]
  • 2008 (March) – Ebadi tells Reuters news agency that Iran's human rights record had regressed in the past two years.[38]
  • 2008 (14 April) – Ebadi released a statement saying, "Threats against my life and security and those of my family, which began some time ago, have intensified", and that the threats warned her against making speeches abroad and against defending Iran's persecuted Baháʼí community.[39]
  • 2008 (June) – Ebadi volunteered to be the lawyer for the arrested Baháʼí leadership of Iran in June.[60]
  • 2008 (7 August) – Ebadi announced[61] via the Muslim Network for Baháʼí Rights that she would defend in court the seven Baháʼí leaders arrested in the spring.[62]
  • 2008 (1 September) – Ebadi published her book Refugee Rights in Iran exposing the lack of rights given to Afghan refugees living in Iran.
  • 2008 (21 December) – Ebadi's office of the Center for the Defense of Human Rights was raided and closed.[63]
  • 2008 (29 December) – Islamic authorities close Ebadi's Center for Defenders of Human Rights, raiding her private office, seizing her computers and files.[64] Worldwide condemnation of raid.[44][63]
  • 2009 (1 January) – Pro-regime "demonstrators" attack Ebadi's home and office.[64]
  • 2009 (12 June) – Ebadi was at a seminar in Spain at the time of Iranian presidential election. "[W]hen the crackdown began colleagues told her not to come home" and as of October 2009 she has not returned to Iran.[65]
  • 2009 (16 June) – In the midst of nationwide protests against the very surprising and highly suspect election results giving incumbent President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad a landslide victory, Ebadi calls for new elections in an interview with Radio Free Europe.[66]
  • 2009 (24 September) – Touring abroad to lobby international leaders and highlight the Islamic regime's human rights abuses since June, Ebadi criticizes the British government for putting talks on the Islamic regime's nuclear program ahead of protesting its brutal suppression of opposition. Noting the British Ambassador attended President Ahmadinejad's inauguration, she said, "`That's when I felt that human rights were being neglected. ... Undemocratic countries are more dangerous than a nuclear bomb. It's undemocratic countries that jeopardize international peace.`" She calls for "the downgrading of Western embassies, the withdrawal of ambassadors and the freezing of the assets of Iran's leaders."[65]
  • 2009 (November) – The Iranian authorities seize Ebadi's Nobel medal together with other belongings from her safe-deposit box.[67]
  • 2009 (29 December) – Ebadi's sister Noushin Ebadi was detained apparently to silence Ebadi who is abroad.[68] "She was neither politically active nor had a role in any rally. It's necessary to point out that in the past two months she had been summoned several times to the Intelligence Ministry, who told her to persuade me to give up my human rights activities. I have been arrested solely because of my activities in human rights," Ebadi said.[69]
  • 2010 (June) – Ebadi's husband denounced her on state television. According to Ebadi this was a coerced confession after his arrest and torture.[70]
  • 2012 (26 January) — in a statement released by the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran, Ebadi called on "all freedom-loving people across the globe" to work for the release of three opposition leaders — Zahra Rahnavard, Mir Hossein Mousavi, and Mehdi Karroubi — who have been confined to house arrest for nearly a year.[71]

Lawsuits edit

Lawsuit against the United States edit

In 2004, Ebadi filed a lawsuit against the U.S. Department of Treasury because of restrictions she faced over publishing her memoir in the United States. American trade laws prohibit writers from embargoed countries. The law also banned American literary agent Wendy Strothman from working with Ebadi. Azar Nafisi wrote a letter in support of Ebadi. Nafisi said that the law infringes on the First Amendment.[72] After a lengthy legal battle, Ebadi won and was able to publish her memoir in the United States.[73]

Other activities edit

Recognition edit

Awards edit

Honorary degrees edit

Books published edit

  • Iran Awakening: One Woman's Journey to Reclaim Her Life and Country (2007) ISBN 978-0-676-97802-5
  • Refugee Rights in Iran (2008) ISBN 978-0-86356-678-3
  • The Golden Cage: Three brothers, Three choices, One destiny (2011) ISBN 978-0-9798456-4-2
  • Until We Are Free (2016) ISBN 978-0812998870

See also edit

References edit

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  80. ^ Williams College: Honorary Degree Citation 2004 3 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine, last retrieved on 5 May 2008
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  82. ^ "News". Cambridge Network. Retrieved 19 January 2019.
  83. ^ . Archived from the original on 19 May 2016. Retrieved 18 October 2022.

Further reading edit

  • Kim, U.; Aasen, H. S. & Ebadi, S. (2003). Democracy, human rights, and Islam in modern Iran: Psychological, social and cultural perspectives. Bergen: Fagbokforlaget. ISBN 978-82-7674-922-9.
  • Monshipouri, M. (2009). "Shirin Ebadi" in Encyclopedia of human rights. Volume 2. David Forsythe (Ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-533402-9
  • "Dr Shirin Ebadi". Middle East Studies. 1 (427): 27–30. 2011. ISSN 0305-0734.
  • "Shirin Ebadi". TIME Magazine. Iran. 28 March 2016. ISSN 0040-781X.
  • Iftikhar, Ahmad (2004). "Shirin Ebadi: A Muslim Woman Nobel Peace Laureate". Social Educatiion. 68 (4): 260–263. ISSN 0037-7724.

External links edit

  • Shirin Ebadi on Nobelprize.org  
  • Shirin Ebadi's biography, Iowa State University
  • Interview With Iranian Nobel Prize Winner: Shirin Ebadi. PBS
  • Gruber Distinguished Lecture in Global Justice: Dr. Shirin Ebadi, Yale Law School
  • Nobel Women's Initiative
  • Quotes from Shirin Ebadi Speeches
  • Shirin Ebadi, avocate pour les droits de l'homme en Iran Jean Albert, Ludivine Tomasso and edited by Jacqueline Duband, Emilie Dessens
Press interviews
  • Iranian elections – Nobel Peace Prize winner Shirin Ebadi talks to Euronews 2013 June 12
  • David Batty in conversation with Shirin Ebadi, "If you want to help Iran, don't attack", The Guardian, 13 June 2008
  • Winter 2007 article from Ms. magazine about activism and feminism in Iran.
Video
  • Video: Shirin Ebadi on 'What's Ahead for Iran', Asia Society, New York, 3 March 2010
  • Shirin Ebadi Presses Iran on Human Rights and Warns Against International Sanctions – video by Democracy Now!
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
Pictures
  • Picture Gallery

shirin, ebadi, persian, شيرين, عبادى, romanized, Širin, ebādi, born, june, 1947, iranian, nobel, laureate, lawyer, writer, teacher, former, judge, founder, defenders, human, rights, center, iran, 2003, ebadi, awarded, nobel, peace, prize, pioneering, efforts, . Shirin Ebadi Persian شيرين عبادى romanized Sirin Ebadi born 21 June 1947 is an Iranian Nobel laureate lawyer writer teacher and a former judge and founder of the Defenders of Human Rights Center in Iran In 2003 Ebadi was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for her pioneering efforts for democracy and women s children s and refugee rights She was the first Muslim woman and the first Iranian to receive the award 4 Shirin Ebadiشيرين عبادىEbadi in 2017Born 1947 06 21 21 June 1947 age 76 1 Hamadan IranNationalityIranian 2 Alma materUniversity of Tehran 3 OccupationsLawyerjudgeKnown forDefenders of Human Rights CenterAwardsRafto Prize 2001 Nobel Peace Prize 2003 JPM Interfaith Award 2004 Legion of Honour 2006 Signature She has lived in exile in London since 2009 5 Contents 1 Life and early career as a judge 2 Ebadi as a lawyer 3 Political views 4 Nobel Peace Prize 5 Post Nobel prize 5 1 Threats 5 2 Seizure 5 3 Post Nobel Prize timeline 6 Lawsuits 6 1 Lawsuit against the United States 7 Other activities 8 Recognition 8 1 Awards 8 2 Honorary degrees 9 Books published 10 See also 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksLife and early career as a judge editEbadi was born in Hamadan into an educated Persian family Her father Mohammad Ali Ebadi was the city s chief notary public and a professor of commercial law Her mother Minu Yamini 6 was a homemaker When she was an infant her family moved to Tehran Before earning a law degree from the University of Tehran Ebadi attended Anoshiravn Dadgar and Reza Shah Kabir schools 7 She was admitted to the law department of the University of Tehran in 1965 and 1969 upon graduation she passed the qualification exams to become a judge After a six month internship period inconsistent she officially became a judge in March 1969 She continued her studies at the University of Tehran to pursue a doctorate in law in 1971 one of her professors was Mahmoud Shehabi Khorassani In 1975 she became the first female president of the Tehran city court and served until the Iranian Revolution 8 She was one of the first female judges in Iran 9 8 10 After the 1979 Revolution women were no longer allowed to serve as judges and she was dismissed and given a new job as a clerk in the court she had presided over 11 Later despite already having a law office permit her applications were repeatedly rejected and Ebadi was unable to practice law until 1993 She used this free time to write books and many articles in Iranian periodicals 3 Ebadi as a lawyer edit nbsp Shirin Ebadi at WSIS press conference By 2004 Ebadi was lecturing law at the University of Tehran while practicing law in Iran 8 She is a campaigner for strengthening the legal status of children and women and her work on women s rights played a key role in the May 1997 landslide presidential election of the reformist Mohammad Khatami As a lawyer she is known for taking up pro bono cases of dissident figures who have fallen foul of the judiciary Among her clients were the family of Dariush Forouhar a dissident intellectual and politician who was found stabbed to death along with his wife Parvaneh Eskandari in their home The couple was among several dissidents who died in a spate of gruesome murders that terrorized Iran s intellectual community Suspicion fell on extremist hard liners determined to stop the more liberal climate fostered by President Khatami who championed freedom of speech The murders were found to be committed by a team of employees of the Iranian Ministry of Intelligence whose head Saeed Emami allegedly committed suicide in jail before being brought to court Ebadi also represented the family of Ezzat Ebrahim Nejad who was killed in the Iranian student protests in July 1999 In 2000 Ebadi was accused of manipulating the videotaped confession of Amir Farshad Ebrahimi a former member of the Ansar e Hezbollah Ebrahimi confessed his involvement in attacks by the organization on the orders of high level conservative authorities including the killing of Ezzat Ebrahim Nejad and attacks against members of President Khatami s cabinet Ebadi claimed that she had only videotaped Amir Farshad Ebrahimi s confessions to present them to the court This case was named Tape makers by hardliners who questioned the credibility of his videotaped deposition and his motives Ebadi and another lawyer Rohami were sentenced to five years in jail and suspension of their law licenses for sending Ebrahimi s videotaped deposition to President Khatami and the head of the Islamic judiciary The Islamic judiciary s supreme court later vacated the sentences but they did not forgive Ebarahimi s videotaped confession and sentenced him to 48 months in jail including 16 months in solitary confinement 12 13 14 This case brought an increased focus on Iran from human rights groups abroad Ebadi has also defended various child abuse cases including the case of Arian Golshani 15 a child who was abused for years and then beaten to death by her father and stepbrother This case gained international attention and caused controversy in Iran Ebadi used this case to highlight Iran s problematic child custody laws whereby custody of children in divorce is usually given to the father even in the case of Arian where her mother had told the court that the father was abusive and had begged for custody of her daughter Ebadi also handled the case of Leila a teenage girl who was gang raped and murdered Leila s family became homeless trying to cover the costs of the execution of the perpetrators owed to the government because in the Islamic Republic of Iran it is the victim s family s responsibility to pay to restore their honor when a girl is raped by paying the government to execute the perpetrator Ebadi was not able to achieve victory in this case Still she brought international attention to this problematic law 16 Ebadi also handled a few cases dealing with bans of periodicals including the cases of Habibollah Peyman Abbas Marufi and Faraj Sarkouhi She has also established two non governmental organizations in Iran with Western funding the Society for Protecting the Rights of the Child SPRC 1994 and the Defenders of Human Rights Center DHRC in 2001 9 12 She also helped in the drafting of the original text of a law against physical abuse of children which was passed by the Iranian parliament in 2002 Female members of Parliament also asked Ebadi to draft a law explaining how a woman s right to divorce her husband is in line with Sharia Islamic Law Ebadi presented the bill before the government but the male members made her leave without considering the bill according to Ebadi s memoir 16 Political views editIn her book Iran Awakening Ebadi explains her political religious views on Islam democracy and gender equality In the last 23 years from the day I was stripped of my judgeship to the years of doing battle in the revolutionary courts of Tehran I had repeated one refrain an interpretation of Islam that is in harmony with equality and democracy is an authentic expression of faith Not religion binds women but the selective dictates of those who wish them cloistered That belief and the conviction that change in Iran must come peacefully and from within has underpinned my work 17 At the same time Ebadi expresses a nationalist love of Iran and has criticized the policies and actions of Western countries She opposed the pro Western Shah initially supported the Islamic Revolution and remembers the CIA s 1953 overthrow of prime minister Mohammad Mosaddeq with rage 18 At a press conference shortly after the Peace Prize announcement Ebadi explicitly rejected foreign interference in the country s affairs The fight for human rights is conducted in Iran by the Iranian people and we are against any foreign intervention in Iran 19 20 Subsequently Ebadi openly defended the Islamic regime s nuclear development program Aside from being economically justified it has become a cause of national pride for an old nation with a glorious history No Iranian government regardless of its ideology or democratic credentials would dare to stop the program 21 However in a 2012 interview Ebadi stated The Iranian people want to stop enrichment but the government doesn t listen Iran is situated on a fault line and people are scared of a Fukushima type of situation happening We want peace security and economic welfare and we cannot forgo all of our other rights for nuclear energy The government claims it is not making a bomb But I am not a member of the government so I cannot speak to this directly The fear is that if they do Israel will be wiped out If the Iranian people are able to topple the government this could improve the situation In 2009 the people of Iran rose up and were badly suppressed Right now Iran is the country with the most journalists in prison This is the price people are paying 22 Concerning the Israeli Palestinian conflict in 2010 Shirin Ebadi was one of four Peace Prize laureates supporting legislation requiring the University of California to divest itself from any companies providing technology to the Israel Defense Forces who bill supporters declared were engaged in war crimes The legislation was supported by the Associated Students of the University of California 23 Since the victory of Hassan Rouhani in the 2013 Iranian presidential election Shirin Ebadi has expressed her worry about the growing human rights violations in her homeland Ebadi in her Dec 2013 speech at Human Rights Day seminar at Leiden University angrily said I will shut up but the problems of Iran will not be solved 24 In April 2015 speaking on the subject of the Western campaign against the Sunni extremist group ISIL in Syria and Iraq Ebadi expressed her desire that the Western world spend money funding education and an end to corruption rather than fighting with guns and bombs She reasoned that because the Islamic State stems from an ideology based on a wrong interpretation of Islam the physical force will not end ISIS because it will not end its beliefs 25 In 2018 in an interview with Bloomberg Ebadi stated her belief that the Islamic Republic has reached a point of which it is now un reformable Ebadi called for a referendum on the Islamic Republic 26 Nobel Peace Prize editOn 10 October 2003 Ebadi was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for her efforts for democracy and human rights especially for the rights of women and children 2 The selection committee praised her as a courageous person who has never heeded the threat to her own safety 27 Now she travels abroad lecturing in the West She is against a policy of forced regime change 28 The decision of the Nobel committee surprised some observers who worldwide Pope John Paul II had been predicted to win the Peace Prize amid speculation that he was nearing death The era in which her prize was granted has been called one when there still seemed a chance of something resembling a detente between the U S and Iran according to Associate Press 29 She presented a book entitled Democracy human rights and Islam in modern Iran Psychological social and cultural perspectives to the Nobel Committee The volume documents the historical and cultural basis of democracy and human rights from Cyrus and Darius 2 500 years ago to Mohammad Mossadeq the prime minister of modern Iran who nationalized the oil industry In her acceptance speech Ebad criticized repression in Iran and insisted that Islam was compatible with democracy human rights and freedom of opinion 28 In the same speech she also criticized US foreign policy particularly the War on terrorism 28 She was the first Iranian and the first Muslim woman to receive the prize 9 Thousands greeted her at the airport when she returned from Paris after receiving the news that she had won the prize The response to the Award in Iran was mixed enthusiastic supporters greeted her at the airport upon her return the conservative media underplayed it and then Iranian President Mohammad Khatami criticized it as political 30 16 In Iran officials of the Islamic Republic were either silent or critical of the selection of Ebadi calling it a political act by a pro Western institution and were also critical when Ebadi did not cover her hair at the Nobel award ceremony 31 IRNA reported the Nobel committee s decision in few lines that the evening newspapers and the Iranian state media waited hours to report and then only as the last item on the radio news update 32 Reformist officials are said to have generally welcomed the award but come under attack for doing so 33 Reformist president Mohammad Khatami did not officially congratulate Ms Ebadi and stated that although the scientific Nobels are important the Peace Prize is not very important and was awarded to Ebadi on the basis of totally political criteria 33 Vice President Mohammad Ali Abtahi the only official to initially congratulate Ebadi defended the president saying abusing the President s words about Ms Ebadi is tantamount to abusing the prize bestowed on her for political considerations citation needed In 2009 Norway s Foreign Minister Jonas Gahr Store published a statement reporting that Ebadi s Nobel Peace Prize had been confiscated by Iranian authorities and that This was the first time a Nobel Peace Prize ha d been confiscated by national authorities 34 Iran denied the charges 35 36 Post Nobel prize edit nbsp UK Foreign Office Minister Alistair Burt meeting Ebadi in London 3 February 2011 Since receiving the Nobel Prize Ebadi has lectured taught and received awards in different countries issued statements and defended people accused of political crimes in Iran She has traveled to and spoken to audiences in India the United States and other countries released her autobiography in an English translation With five other Nobel laureates she created the Nobel Women s Initiative to promote peace justice and equality for women 3 In 2019 Ebadi called for a treaty to end violence against women in support of Every Woman Coalition 37 Threats edit In April 2008 she told Reuters news agency that Iran s human rights record had regressed in the past two years 38 and agreed to defend Bahaʼis arrested in Iran in May 2008 In April 2008 Ebadi released a statement saying Threats against my life and security and those of my family which began some time ago have intensified and that the threats warned her against making speeches abroad and to stop defending Iran s persecuted Bahaʼi community 39 In August 2008 the IRNA news agency published an article attacking Ebadi s links to the Bahaʼi Faith and accused her of seeking support from the West It also criticized Ebadi for defending homosexuals appearing without the Islamic headscarf abroad questioning Islamic punishments and defending CIA agents 40 It accused her daughter Nargess Tavassolian of conversion to the Bahaʼi faith a capital offense in the Islamic Republic However Shirin Ebadi has denied it saying I am proud to say that my family and I are Shiites 41 Her daughter believes the government wanted to scare my mother with this scenario Ebadi believes the attacks are in retaliation for her agreeing to defend the families of the seven Bahaʼis arrested in May 42 In December 2008 Iranian police shut down the office of a human rights group led by her 43 Another human rights group Human Rights Watch has said it was extremely worried about Ebadi s safety 44 and in December 2009 issued a statement demanding the Islamic Republic stop harassing her 45 Among many other complaints the group accused the IRI of detaining Ebadi s husband and sister for questioning and threatened them with losing their jobs and eventual arrest if Ebadi continues her human rights advocacy 45 Seizure edit Ebadi said while in London in late November 2009 that her Nobel Peace Prize medal and diploma had been taken from their bank box alongside her Legion d honneur and a ring she had received from Germany s association of journalists 46 She said they had been taken by the Revolutionary Court approximately three weeks previously 46 47 48 Ebadi also said her bank account was frozen by authorities 46 49 50 Norwegian Minister of Foreign Affairs Jonas Gahr Store expressed his shock and disbelief at the incident 46 The Iranian foreign ministry subsequently denied the confiscation and also criticized Norway for interfering in Iran s affairs 51 52 Post Nobel Prize timeline edit This section is in list format but may read better as prose You can help by converting this section if appropriate Editing help is available October 2021 nbsp Shirin Ebadi during a lecture organized by University of Amsterdam 7 November 2011 2003 November She declared that she would provide legal representation for the family of the murdered Canadian freelance photographer Zahra Kazemi 53 The trial was halted in July 2004 prompting Ebadi and her team to leave the court in protest that their witnesses had not been heard 54 2004 January During the World Social Forum in Bombay Ebadi speaking at a small girls school run by the NGO Sahyog proposed that 30 January the day Mahatma Gandhi was assassinated be observed as International Day of Non Violence This proposal was brought to her by school children in Paris by their Indian teacher Akshay Bakaya Three years later Sonia Gandhi and Archbishop Desmond Tutu relayed the idea at the Delhi Satyagraha Convention in January 2007 preferring however to propose Gandhi s birthday on 2 October The UN General Assembly on 15 June 2007 adopted 2 October as the International Day of Non Violence 2004 Ebadi was listed by Forbes magazine as one of the 100 most powerful women in the world 55 She is also included in a published list of the 100 most influential women of all time 56 2005 Spring Ebadi taught a course on Islam and Human Rights at the University of Arizona s James E Rogers College of Law in Tucson Arizona 2005 12 May Ebadi delivered an address on Senior Class Day at Vanderbilt University Nashville Tennessee Vanderbilt Chancellor Gordon Gee presented Ebadi with the Chancellor s Medal for her human rights work 57 2005 Ebadi was voted the world s 12th leading public intellectual in The 2005 Global Intellectuals Poll by Prospect UK 2006 Random House released her first book for a Western audience Iran Awakening A Memoir of Revolution and Hope with Azadeh Moaveni A reading of the book was serialized as BBC Radio 4 s Book of the Week in September 2006 American novelist David Ebershoff was the book s editor 2006 Ebadi was one of the founders of The Nobel Women s Initiative along with sister Nobel Peace laureates Betty Williams Mairead Corrigan Maguire Wangari Maathai Jody Williams and Rigoberta Menchu Tum Six women representing North America and South America Europe the Middle East and Africa decided to bring together their experiences in a united effort for peace with justice and equality The Nobel Women s Initiative aims to help strengthen work being done in support of women s rights worldwide 58 2007 17 May Ebadi announced that she would defend the Iranian American scholar Haleh Esfandiari who is jailed in Tehran 59 2008 March Ebadi tells Reuters news agency that Iran s human rights record had regressed in the past two years 38 2008 14 April Ebadi released a statement saying Threats against my life and security and those of my family which began some time ago have intensified and that the threats warned her against making speeches abroad and against defending Iran s persecuted Bahaʼi community 39 2008 June Ebadi volunteered to be the lawyer for the arrested Bahaʼi leadership of Iran in June 60 2008 7 August Ebadi announced 61 via the Muslim Network for Bahaʼi Rights that she would defend in court the seven Bahaʼi leaders arrested in the spring 62 2008 1 September Ebadi published her book Refugee Rights in Iran exposing the lack of rights given to Afghan refugees living in Iran 2008 21 December Ebadi s office of the Center for the Defense of Human Rights was raided and closed 63 2008 29 December Islamic authorities close Ebadi s Center for Defenders of Human Rights raiding her private office seizing her computers and files 64 Worldwide condemnation of raid 44 63 2009 1 January Pro regime demonstrators attack Ebadi s home and office 64 2009 12 June Ebadi was at a seminar in Spain at the time of Iranian presidential election W hen the crackdown began colleagues told her not to come home and as of October 2009 she has not returned to Iran 65 2009 16 June In the midst of nationwide protests against the very surprising and highly suspect election results giving incumbent President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad a landslide victory Ebadi calls for new elections in an interview with Radio Free Europe 66 2009 24 September Touring abroad to lobby international leaders and highlight the Islamic regime s human rights abuses since June Ebadi criticizes the British government for putting talks on the Islamic regime s nuclear program ahead of protesting its brutal suppression of opposition Noting the British Ambassador attended President Ahmadinejad s inauguration she said That s when I felt that human rights were being neglected Undemocratic countries are more dangerous than a nuclear bomb It s undemocratic countries that jeopardize international peace She calls for the downgrading of Western embassies the withdrawal of ambassadors and the freezing of the assets of Iran s leaders 65 2009 November The Iranian authorities seize Ebadi s Nobel medal together with other belongings from her safe deposit box 67 2009 29 December Ebadi s sister Noushin Ebadi was detained apparently to silence Ebadi who is abroad 68 She was neither politically active nor had a role in any rally It s necessary to point out that in the past two months she had been summoned several times to the Intelligence Ministry who told her to persuade me to give up my human rights activities I have been arrested solely because of my activities in human rights Ebadi said 69 2010 June Ebadi s husband denounced her on state television According to Ebadi this was a coerced confession after his arrest and torture 70 2012 26 January in a statement released by the International Campaign for Human Rights in Iran Ebadi called on all freedom loving people across the globe to work for the release of three opposition leaders Zahra Rahnavard Mir Hossein Mousavi and Mehdi Karroubi who have been confined to house arrest for nearly a year 71 Lawsuits editLawsuit against the United States edit In 2004 Ebadi filed a lawsuit against the U S Department of Treasury because of restrictions she faced over publishing her memoir in the United States American trade laws prohibit writers from embargoed countries The law also banned American literary agent Wendy Strothman from working with Ebadi Azar Nafisi wrote a letter in support of Ebadi Nafisi said that the law infringes on the First Amendment 72 After a lengthy legal battle Ebadi won and was able to publish her memoir in the United States 73 Other activities editApne Aap Women Worldwide Co Chair of the International Advisory Board 74 Aurora Prize Member of the Selection Committee since 2015 75 Business for Peace Award Committee Member 2009 Reporters Without Borders RWB Member of the Emeritus Board 76 Scholars at Risk SAR Member of the Ambassadors Council 77 Nuremberg International Human Rights Award Member of the Jury 2004 2020 78 Recognition editAwards edit Awarded plate by Human Rights Watch 1996 Official spectator of Human Rights Watch 1996 Awarded Rafto Prize Human Rights Prize in Norway 2001 Nobel Peace Prize in October 2003 Women s eNews 21 Leaders for the 21st Century Award 2004 International Democracy Award 2004 James Parks Morton Interfaith Award from the Interfaith Center of New York 2004 Lawyer of the Year award 2004 UCI Citizen Peacebuilding Award 2005 The Golden Plate Award by the American Academy of Achievement 2005 79 Legion of Honor award 2006 Toleranzpreis der Evangelischen Akademie Tutzing 2008 Award for the Global Defence of Human Rights International Service Human Rights Award 2009 Wolfgang Friedmann Memorial Award Columbia Journal of Transnational Law 2013 Honorary degrees edit Doctor of Laws Williams College 2004 80 Doctor of Laws Brown University 2004 Doctor of Laws University of British Columbia 2004 Honorary doctorate University of Maryland College Park 2004 Honorary doctorate University of Toronto 2004 Honorary doctorate Simon Fraser University 2004 Honorary doctorate University of Akureyri 2004 Honorary doctorate Australian Catholic University 2005 Honorary doctorate University of San Francisco 2005 Honorary doctorate Concordia University 2005 Honorary doctorate The University of York The University of Canada 2005 Honorary doctorate Universite Jean Moulin in Lyon 2005 Honorary doctorate Loyola University Chicago 2007 Honorary Doctorate The New School University 2007 Honorary Doctor of Laws Marquette University 2009 81 Honorary Doctor of Law University of Cambridge 2011 82 Honorary Doctorate School of Oriental and African Studies SOAS University of London 2012 Honorary Doctor of Laws Law Society of Upper Canada 2012 83 Books published editIran Awakening One Woman s Journey to Reclaim Her Life and Country 2007 ISBN 978 0 676 97802 5 Refugee Rights in Iran 2008 ISBN 978 0 86356 678 3 The Golden Cage Three brothers Three choices One destiny 2011 ISBN 978 0 9798456 4 2 Until We Are Free 2016 ISBN 978 0812998870See also editIranian women List of famous Persian women List of peace activists Intellectual movements in Iran Persian women s movement Islamic feminismReferences edit Daniel P O Neil 2007 Fatima s sword Everyday female resistance in post revolutionary Iran pp 55 61 ISBN 978 0 549 40947 2 Retrieved 15 January 2012 a b The Nobel Peace Prize 2003 NobelPrize org Retrieved 12 October 2007 a b c Karen L Kinnear 2011 Women in Developing Countries A Reference Handbook ABC CLIO p 152 ISBN 978 1 59884 425 2 Shirin Ebadi Biography Nobel Prize amp Facts Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 2 October 2023 Jerome Citron Shirin Ebadi Je porte la voix de mon peuple CFDT Magazine 2016 No 427 p 32 33 Shirin Ebadi Fast Facts CNN 2 January 2013 Retrieved 24 August 2023 Shirin Ebadi www britannica com Retrieved 2 October 2023 a b c 2004 2005 Lecture Shirin Ebadi University of Alberta Visiting Lectureship in Human Rights Edmonton Alberta 21 October 2004 archived from the original on 27 April 2017 retrieved 26 April 2017 a b c Profile Shirin Ebadi BBC News 27 November 2009 Retrieved 26 April 2017 Porochista Khakpour 25 April 2017 Shirin Ebadi Almost a fourth of the people on Earth are Muslim Are they like each other Of course not Retrieved 25 April 2017 Nobel Peace Prize laureate Shirin Ebadi reflects on decades of resistance against Iran s regime The Globe and Mail 6 October 2023 a b Shirin Ebadi Biographical The Norwegian Nobel Institute 2003 Retrieved 26 April 2017 Shirin Ebadi Facts The Norwegian Nobel Institute 2003 Retrieved 26 April 2017 Shirin Ebadi Other Resources The Norwegian Nobel Institute 2003 Retrieved 26 April 2017 LoLordo Ann Girl s murder shames Iran Torture She was as much a victim of Iran s child custody laws as of relatives who killed her baltimoresun com Retrieved 19 January 2019 a b c Shirin Ebadi 2007 Azadeh Moaveni ed Iran Awakening One Woman s Journey to Reclaim Her Life and Country Random House p 256 ISBN 978 0 8129 7528 4 Ebadi Shirin Iran Awakening A Memoir of Revolution and Hope by Shirin Ebadi with Azadeh Moaveni Random House 2006 p 204 Hafezi Parisa 3 February 2023 Nobel laureate Ebadi says Iran s revolutionary process is irreversible Reuters Washington Post Nobels With a Message last retrieved on 12 October 2007 Working for Change Eyes off the prize Archived 10 November 2006 at the Wayback Machine last retrieved on 12 October 2007 The Sydney Morning Herald Sunnis fear US missteps will bolster Tehran s influence last retrieved on 12 October 2007 Shirin Ebadi Interview Iran s Voice of Reason on Nuke Talks Daily Beast Statement of Support from Nobel Women Peace Laureates 28 April 2010 Archived from the original on 2 May 2010 Retrieved 1 May 2010 Video on YouTube Iranian Nobel Peace Prize Laureate Shirin Ebadi on Nuclear Deal Islamic State Women s Rights Democracy Now Retrieved 7 November 2015 Iran s Nobel Laureate Is Done With Reform She Wants Regime Change Bloomberg com 5 April 2018 Retrieved 19 January 2019 bbc co uk Nobel winner s plea to Iran last retrieved on 12 October 2007 a b c Charles Kurzman The Missing Martyrs Oxford University Press pp 155 157 Nobel Peace Prizes awarded to Iranian women 20 years apart trace tensions with the West AP News 6 October 2023 Retrieved 13 December 2023 Ramin Mostaghim 1 November 2003 Words of advice from peace laureate Teheran Asia Times Archived from the original on 5 April 2004 a href Template Cite news html title Template Cite news cite news a CS1 maint unfit URL link Safa Haeri Iranian Muslim Women Are Free To Wear Or Not The Hejab Mohammad Khatami Iran Press Service Retrieved 9 June 2011 Iranians Celebrated With Joy Ebadi S Nobel Peace Prize By Safa Haeri Iran Press Service Archived from the original on 28 February 2019 Retrieved 9 June 2011 a b Khatami advice to Nobel laureate October 14 2003 BBC News 14 October 2003 Retrieved 9 June 2011 Norway says Iran confiscated Ebadi s Nobel Reuters 27 November 2009 Retrieved 26 April 2009 Iran Denies It Confiscated Ebadi s Nobel Medal The New York Times Reuters 27 November 2009 Retrieved 27 November 2009 permanent dead link Meet the Laureates Shirin Ebadi Nobel Peace Prize 2003 World Summit of Nobel Peace Laureates Activists campaign for treaty to end violence against women Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved 13 July 2022 a b Iran to probe threats against Nobel laureate Ebadi Reuters 15 April 2008 Retrieved 9 June 2011 a b Top Iranian dissident threatened BBC News 14 April 2008 Retrieved 9 June 2011 Iranian press targets Nobel Prize winner Ebadi Media www mcgilltribune com Archived from the original on 18 November 2009 Retrieved 9 June 2011 Ebadi denies state media report on daughter s conversion The Daily Star 8 August 2008 Retrieved 29 September 2020 Safa Haeri 9 August 2008 By Attacking Mrs Shirin Ebadi The Islamic Republic Revives Stalinian Methods Iran press service com Archived from the original on 19 August 2016 Retrieved 9 June 2011 Iran Shuts Down Nobel Winner s Rights Group Voice of America 21 December 2008 Retrieved 25 November 2011 a b Iranian raid on Ebadi condemned BBC News 31 December 2008 Retrieved 9 June 2011 a b Iran Stop Harassing Shirin Ebadi Human Rights Watch 10 December 2009 Retrieved 13 December 2023 a b c d Shirin Ebadi Nobel Peace Prize medal seized by Iran BBC 27 November 2009 Retrieved 27 November 2009 ABC Live India The Real Story Behind News Archived from the original on 23 September 2010 Retrieved 6 April 2023 Outrage after Iran seizes Nobel medal Canadian Broadcasting Corporation 27 November 2009 Retrieved 9 June 2011 Iran confiscates Shirin Ebadi s Nobel Peace Prize The Daily Telegraph UK 27 November 2009 Retrieved 27 November 2009 Ebadi defiant despite Iran assets seizure Bangkok Post 27 November 2009 Retrieved 27 November 2009 Iran denies it confiscated Ebadi s Nobel medal Reuters 27 November 2009 Retrieved 27 November 2009 Tehran denies seizing Shirin Ebadi s Nobel medal BBC News 27 November 2009 Retrieved 9 June 2011 Middle East Iran A Nobel Advocate New York Times 14 June 2004 Retrieved 15 January 2012 Fathi Nazila 19 July 2004 Iran Stops Trial in the Murder of a Journalist New York Times Retrieved 15 January 2012 Forbes com Forbes 100 Most Powerful Women in the World 2004 archive is 30 July 2012 Archived from the original on 30 July 2012 Retrieved 19 January 2019 Britannica Educational Publishing 2009 The 100 Most Influential Women of All Time The Rosen Publishing Group pp 330 331 ISBN 978 1 61530 058 7 Retrieved 15 January 2012 Emily Pearce 15 March 2005 Iranian Nobel Peace Prize winner to speak at Vanderbilt s Senior Day Vanderbilt News Retrieved 10 January 2012 1 Nobel Women s Initiative U S News Staff 17 May 2007 News Desk Politics amp Policy usnews com Retrieved 9 June 2011 Local Bahaʼis worry about their fellow believers in Iran Press release The Chatham News 24 February 2009 Archived from the original on 3 July 2009 Retrieved 2 March 2009 In court I will defend the Bahaʼis Bahairights org Retrieved 9 June 2011 Iran s arrest of Baha is condemned CNN 16 May 2008 Retrieved 23 May 2010 a b Bureau of Democracy Human Rights and Labor 25 February 2009 2008 Human Rights Report Iran United States State Department Archived from the original on 26 February 2009 Retrieved 1 March 2009 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b Moaveni Azadeh 6 January 2009 Iran s Nobel Laureate Has Become a Target of the Regime Azadeh MOAVENI JANUARY 6 2009 The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 9 June 2011 a b Martin Fletcher 24 September 2009 Britain is appeasing Iran Nobel laureate Shirin Ebadi says The Times UK Iranian Nobel Peace Prize Winner Ebadi Calls For New Elections 16 June 2009 Iran tells Norway to stay out of Nobel medal row permanent dead link Associated Press 26 November 2009 Iran detains Nobel laureate s sister CNN 29 December 2009 Retrieved 29 December 2009 Shirin Ebadi statement Archived from the original on 28 December 2009 Retrieved 6 April 2023 Ebadi Shirin 3 March 2016 Opinion Tricked Into Cheating and Sentenced to Death The New York Times Retrieved 19 January 2019 Nobel laureate calls for freedom for 3 Iranian opposition leaders after a year of house arrest dead link Associated Press 26 January 2012 All Things Considered 5 December 2004 Iranian Nobel Winner Suing U S over Memoir NPR Retrieved 9 June 2011 All Things Considered 19 December 2004 Ebadi Wins Round with U S over Memoirs NPR Retrieved 9 June 2011 International Advisory Board Apne Aap Women Worldwide Selection Committee Archived 9 September 2018 at the Wayback Machine Aurora Prize Emeritus Board Reporters Without Borders RWB Ambassadors Council Scholars at Risk SAR Jury Nuremberg International Human Rights Award Golden Plate Awardees of the American Academy of Achievement www achievement org American Academy of Achievement Williams College Honorary Degree Citation 2004 Archived 3 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine last retrieved on 5 May 2008 University Honors Shirin Ebadi Marquette University Archived from the original on 3 November 2009 Retrieved 10 January 2010 News Cambridge Network Retrieved 19 January 2019 Nobel laureate receives honorary doctorate from Law Society Archived from the original on 19 May 2016 Retrieved 18 October 2022 Further reading editKim U Aasen H S amp Ebadi S 2003 Democracy human rights and Islam in modern Iran Psychological social and cultural perspectives Bergen Fagbokforlaget ISBN 978 82 7674 922 9 Monshipouri M 2009 Shirin Ebadi in Encyclopedia of human rights Volume 2 David Forsythe Ed Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 533402 9 Dr Shirin Ebadi Middle East Studies 1 427 27 30 2011 ISSN 0305 0734 Shirin Ebadi TIME Magazine Iran 28 March 2016 ISSN 0040 781X Iftikhar Ahmad 2004 Shirin Ebadi A Muslim Woman Nobel Peace Laureate Social Educatiion 68 4 260 263 ISSN 0037 7724 External links edit nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Shirin Ebadi nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Shirin Ebadi Shirin Ebadi on Nobelprize org nbsp Shirin Ebadi s biography Iowa State University Interview With Iranian Nobel Prize Winner Shirin Ebadi PBS Gruber Distinguished Lecture in Global Justice Dr Shirin Ebadi Yale Law School Nobel Women s Initiative Quotes from Shirin Ebadi Speeches TIME com 10 Questions for Shirin Ebadi Shirin Ebadi avocate pour les droits de l homme en Iran Jean Albert Ludivine Tomasso and edited by Jacqueline Duband Emilie Dessens Press interviews Iranian elections Nobel Peace Prize winner Shirin Ebadi talks to Euronews 2013 June 12 David Batty in conversation with Shirin Ebadi If you want to help Iran don t attack The Guardian 13 June 2008 Nermeen Shaikh AsiaSource Interview with Shirin Ebadi Iran s Quiet Revolution Winter 2007 article from Ms magazine about activism and feminism in Iran Video Video Shirin Ebadi on What s Ahead for Iran Asia Society New York 3 March 2010 Shirin Ebadi Presses Iran on Human Rights and Warns Against International Sanctions video by Democracy Now Appearances on C SPAN Pictures Picture Gallery Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Shirin Ebadi amp oldid 1217324321, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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