Executive Summary
The preceding four papers have mapped the architecture of the Islamic Republic’s control, the social forces arrayed against it, the strategic pathways through which transition might be achieved, and the competing political visions that would contend for influence in a post-regime order. This final paper addresses the question that all of those analyses point toward but none fully answers: what institutional structures, sequencing decisions, and governance frameworks would give a post-mullah Iran its best chance of consolidating democratic governance rather than cycling from theocratic authoritarianism into some other form of authoritarian rule? The historical record of transitions from authoritarian governance is sobering. Transitions frequently fail not because the forces that defeated the incumbent regime lacked democratic commitment but because the institutional vacuum created by rapid regime change was filled by whoever was most organizationally prepared — which is rarely the most democratically legitimate force. Iran’s specific configuration of risks — the IRGC’s economic depth, the ethnic complexity of the state, the absence of pre-existing democratic party infrastructure, the regional environment’s hostility to democratic consolidation, and the diaspora’s democratic deficit — makes the institutional design challenge exceptionally demanding. The central argument of this paper is that successful transition in Iran requires deliberate attention to seven interlocking institutional challenges: transitional governance and legitimacy; constitutional design and the sequencing of institution-building; transitional justice; security sector transformation; economic reconstruction; international recognition and regional stabilization; and the specific sequencing problem of elections before institutions versus institutions before elections. Each challenge is analyzed with reference to the comparative literature on democratic transitions and with specific attention to the features of the Iranian case that make generic prescriptions insufficient.
1. Introduction: Why Transitions Fail
The Iranian opposition’s energy has been concentrated, understandably, on the question of how to end the Islamic Republic. The question of what happens the day after has received less systematic attention — not because opposition thinkers are unaware of its importance but because it is harder to organize around and because the political costs of engaging it honestly are high. Addressing it honestly requires acknowledging that the forces united in opposing the regime disagree profoundly about the future, that some of those disagreements cannot be resolved by good intentions or personal chemistry, and that the institutional architecture necessary to manage them requires deliberate design that takes precedence over improvisation.
The comparative record on this question is extensive and instructive. The literature on democratic transitions and consolidation — drawing on the experiences of Southern Europe in the 1970s, Latin America in the 1980s, Eastern Europe in the 1990s, and the Arab Spring’s mixed results in the 2010s — consistently identifies several mechanisms through which initially promising transitions fail. Transitions fail when the coercive apparatus of the former regime reconstitutes itself under new political auspices — the Egyptian military’s management of the post-Mubarak transition being the most recent and instructive example. They fail when ethnic or regional conflicts, held in check by authoritarian repression, erupt in the absence of institutions capable of managing them peacefully — the Yugoslav disintegration being the paradigmatic catastrophe. They fail when economic collapse in the transition period produces popular disillusionment with democratic governance before democratic institutions have had time to demonstrate their capacity — the Weimar Republic’s trajectory being the historical archetype. And they fail when the first post-transition elections produce a political majority that uses its democratic mandate to dismantle the democratic framework that produced it — the Algerian military’s cancellation of the 1992 elections after an Islamist first-round victory being a regional example of the fear, if not a complete model, that is relevant to Iranian conditions.<sup>1</sup>
Iran faces recognizable versions of all four of these failure mechanisms. The IRGC’s institutional depth and economic integration mean that it will not simply dissolve; some form of security sector transformation is necessary to prevent its reconstitution as a praetorian force under new political management. The ethnic diversity analyzed in White Paper 4 means that the suppression of ethnic political demands that the Islamic Republic has maintained through coercion will end at the moment of transition, releasing political energies that could either be channeled into democratic negotiation or erupt into violent conflict. The economic devastation of the late Islamic Republic era means that a post-transition government will inherit a damaged economy whose short-term deterioration during the transition period could produce political disillusionment before democratic institutions have demonstrated their competence. And the political landscape includes forces — religious conservatives, ethnic nationalist maximalists, and potentially reconstituted security apparatus elements — that might use democratic processes to achieve anti-democratic outcomes if the constitutional framework does not include adequate institutional safeguards.
None of these risks is inevitable, and none is unique to Iran. What distinguishes the Iranian case is their combination and their depth, which makes the institutional design challenge more demanding than in most comparable transitions and the cost of institutional improvisation correspondingly higher.
2. Transitional Governance: The Authority Problem
The First and Most Urgent Question
The first institutional question a post-regime Iran faces is also the most immediate: who governs, with what authority, and through what institutional mechanism, in the period between the regime’s fall and the establishment of new democratic institutions through constitutional processes? This is the authority problem, and getting it wrong — by vesting transitional authority in a body too narrow to be legitimate, too broad to be functional, or too temporary to provide the stability that constitutional design requires — is the most common single cause of transition failure.<sup>2</sup>
The authority problem has no perfect solution because transitional authority is inherently paradoxical: it must exercise power before democratic legitimacy has been established through elections, yet it must exercise that power in ways that are sufficiently legitimate to be accepted by the diverse political communities whose cooperation transition requires. Every transitional government is, in this sense, simultaneously provisional and consequential — it makes decisions that shape the constitutional framework for decades while deriving its authority from nothing more solid than the collapse of the previous system and the consent of the political actors present at the transition moment.
Models of Transitional Governance
The comparative literature identifies three primary models of transitional governance, each with distinct advantages and risks. The first is a provisional government drawn from existing opposition forces — the model used in post-Ceaușescu Romania (disastrously), post-Ben Ali Tunisia (more successfully), and post-Marcos Philippines (with mixed results). Its advantage is speed; its risk is that it vests provisional authority in whoever is most organized at the transition moment rather than whoever is most representative of the full political spectrum.
The second model is a negotiated transitional council in which the incumbent regime and the opposition jointly manage the transition — the model of Poland’s round table, South Africa’s Convention for a Democratic South Africa (CODESA), and Chile’s managed transition. Its advantage is that it provides credible commitments to both sides; its risk is that it requires the incumbent regime to accept a framework that constrains its own authority, which requires either a crisis severe enough to make continued resistance irrational or an opposition strong enough to impose terms.
The third model is a caretaker administration drawn from technocratic or non-partisan figures, which manages the transition process without strong political identity while elected constitutional and legislative bodies are established. Tunisia’s post-2011 process approximated this model in its more successful phases, as did Czechoslovakia’s Velvet Revolution transition.
The Iranian Transitional Governance Problem
Iran’s specific conditions make each of these models partially applicable and none fully adequate. The negotiated transitional council model — the most institutionally solid — requires a regime faction willing to negotiate, which the analysis in White Paper 3 suggests is possible but not yet present in concentrated form. The provisional government model risks replicating the 1979 dynamic, in which the most organizationally prepared force — then the clerical network, potentially the IRGC or a subset of it today — captures transitional authority at the expense of the democratic forces that generated the mobilization. The technocratic caretaker model requires agreement on who the technocrats are and what institution legitimates their authority, which requires prior political agreement that is itself difficult to achieve in the absence of institutions.
The most viable framework for Iranian transitional governance, drawing on these models’ comparative lessons, would combine elements of all three: a transitional council with explicit representation of the major political communities — Persian nationalist republicans, Kurdish and other ethnic minority parties, labor and civil society organizations, women’s movement representatives, and Islamic reformist currents — exercising oversight authority over a technocratic executive charged with managing immediate governance needs. This council would be explicitly provisional, deriving its authority from its representativeness rather than from democratic election, and would be constitutionally bound to transfer authority to elected institutions within a defined timeframe — eighteen to twenty-four months being the comparative evidence’s suggested range for avoiding both the risks of rushed elections and the risks of indefinite transitional authority.<sup>3</sup>
The critical design feature of any Iranian transitional council is explicit inclusion of ethnic minority representatives with genuine veto authority over decisions affecting ethnic minority regions — not token representation but structural power to block transitional decisions that preemptively determine constitutional outcomes on the ethnic federalism question. Without this feature, ethnic minority communities have no institutional reason to accept the transitional council’s authority, and every reason to use the transition period to establish facts on the ground in their regions that preempt constitutional negotiation.
3. Constitutional Design: Process and Substance
Process as Legitimacy
The constitutional design process is as important as constitutional substance in determining whether the resulting document commands the broad acceptance necessary for democratic consolidation. A constitution drafted by a narrow elite, however technically excellent, will be contested by the communities excluded from its drafting. A constitution that emerges from a genuinely participatory process — even if the substance is imperfect — is more likely to generate the social legitimacy that democratic consolidation requires.<sup>4</sup>
The comparative models for constitutional design processes vary significantly in their participatory ambition. South Africa’s constitutional process (1994–1996) involved public submissions from millions of citizens, extensive civil society participation, and two rounds of constitutional drafting with public commentary periods — producing a constitution whose legitimacy has been durable even as its implementation has been imperfect. Tunisia’s 2014 constitution emerged from a National Constituent Assembly elected specifically for constitutional purposes, with significant civil society involvement. Iceland’s 2011 crowdsourced constitutional process — though it ultimately failed to be ratified — represents the outer limit of participatory constitutional design.
For Iran, the constitutional design process must address several specific requirements. It must provide genuine representation for ethnic minority communities in the drafting process — not merely consultation but drafting authority. It must include mechanisms for women’s movement organizations to ensure that gender equality provisions are constitutionally entrenched as analyzed in White Paper 4. It must be conducted with sufficient transparency that the Iranian population inside the country — not merely the diaspora — can follow, comment, and develop informed preferences about the key choices. And it must result in a ratification process — most likely a constitutional referendum — that provides democratic legitimacy to the resulting document in a way that a drafting assembly alone cannot.<sup>5</sup>
Substantive Constitutional Choices
On the substance of constitutional design, the analysis in this suite suggests several priority areas where getting the design right matters enormously for democratic consolidation.
The form of government question — presidential, parliamentary, or semi-presidential — is less consequential than it appears in diaspora political debates, because the performance of any formal governmental structure depends more on the health of the underlying democratic culture and institutional infrastructure than on the specific design of executive-legislative relations. What matters more than the formal model is that the constitution includes genuine separation of powers with real judicial independence, genuine accountability mechanisms that make officials answerable for their conduct in office, and electoral systems that give minority communities fair representation without creating the fragmentation that makes parliamentary governance dysfunctional.<sup>6</sup>
The religion-state relationship requires careful constitutional specification. The comparative options range from strict constitutional secularism — the French laïcité model, in which religion has no formal role in the state — to constitutional recognition of Islamic legal principles as a source of but not the source of law, to a model in which the state is formally neutral toward religion while protecting the free exercise of religious practice. For Iran, strict constitutional secularism has the advantage of cleanest separation from the Islamic Republic’s foundational framework, but it risks alienating the significant minority of Iranians who remain genuinely religious and who would experience strict secularism as an imposition as culturally coercive as the Islamic Republic’s imposition of religious observance, only in the opposite direction. A model in which the constitution protects religious practice as an individual right, prohibits state compulsion in religious matters, removes all formal roles for religious authority in state institutions, and guarantees equality before secular law regardless of religious identity provides the functional protections that both secular and religious Iranians need without requiring either community to accept the symbolic framework of the other.<sup>7</sup>
The entrenched rights question requires explicit constitutional specification of which rights are immune from ordinary legislative revision and require supermajority amendment procedures. Based on the analysis in White Paper 4, the minimum set of entrenched rights for Iranian democratic consolidation includes: full gender equality in all legal domains; freedom of religion and conscience, including the right to apostasy; minority language rights and cultural expression; freedom of expression, assembly, and association; and the right to form independent trade unions and engage in collective bargaining. These are not a complete catalogue of individual rights but the specific entrenched rights whose absence would make democratic consolidation most precarious given Iran’s specific political landscape.<sup>8</sup>
The territorial organization of the state — the federal or decentralized question — should be constitutionally addressed through a framework that provides genuine regional autonomy without precommitting to any specific model before the constitutional process has given ethnic minority communities the opportunity to negotiate the terms of their participation. The constitutional framework should specify the minimum content of regional autonomy — language rights, local governance authority, a defined share of regional resource revenues — while leaving the specific implementation architecture to be negotiated within the constitutional process rather than imposed from outside it.
4. Transitional Justice: Between Accountability and Reconciliation
The Core Tension
Transitional justice — the set of mechanisms through which a society addresses the crimes of the predecessor regime — involves a fundamental tension between accountability and reconciliation that no formula resolves perfectly. Full accountability — prosecuting every official who participated in political repression, torture, execution, and corruption — risks creating a security apparatus in open resistance to the transition, driving former regime loyalists into spoiler coalitions, and consuming the transitional government’s limited institutional capacity in legal processes rather than governance. Full amnesty — accepting impunity for regime crimes in exchange for peaceful transition — betrays the victims of those crimes, provides no deterrent to future human rights violations, and creates a political culture in which accountability for state violence is understood to be negotiable. Every successful transition has found a position between these extremes that is specific to its own political conditions.<sup>9</sup>
The Scale of the Iranian Accountability Challenge
The Islamic Republic’s human rights record creates a transitional justice challenge of significant scale. The 1988 prison massacres — in which an estimated 4,000–5,000 political prisoners were executed over several weeks on direct orders from Khomeini, following the fatwa of a three-man “death commission” — represent the single most acute accountability demand. Survivors, families of victims, and human rights organizations have documented this episode with sufficient precision to support criminal prosecution under international humanitarian law standards, and the 2022 Swedish prosecution and conviction of Hamid Nouri — an Iranian prison official who participated in the massacres — under universal jurisdiction principles demonstrates that legal accountability is achievable rather than merely aspirational.<sup>10</sup>
Beyond the 1988 massacres, the accountability demands include: the systematic torture of political prisoners documented across four decades; the suppression of the 2009 Green Movement, including killings and systematic sexual violence against detainees; the killing of protesters in the 2019 and 2022–23 uprisings; the IRGC’s economic crimes, including the systematic looting of confiscated assets through the bonyad and Setad systems; and the individual human rights violations of specific officials documented in the international human rights record.
A Framework for Iranian Transitional Justice
The comparative transitional justice literature suggests a framework for Iran that combines several mechanisms rather than relying on any single approach. Criminal prosecution before an independent domestic tribunal — supported by the international legal infrastructure developed through the Nouri case and parallel universal jurisdiction proceedings — should be reserved for those bearing the greatest responsibility for the most serious crimes: the commanders who authorized the 1988 massacres, the officials who ordered lethal force against unarmed protesters in 2009, 2019, and 2022–23, and the senior IRGC and intelligence officials responsible for systematic torture. This level of prosecution is necessary for the accountability norm to be taken seriously; without it, transitional justice becomes symbolically meaningless.<sup>11</sup>
Below the level of criminal prosecution, a truth and reconciliation process — modeled on the South African TRC but adapted to Iranian conditions — can serve multiple functions: creating a documented public record of the regime’s crimes, providing victims and their families with official acknowledgment of their suffering, offering lower-level perpetrators a pathway to conditional amnesty in exchange for full disclosure, and beginning the social process of confronting the regime’s history that democratic consolidation requires. The TRC model’s most important feature for Iran is not the amnesty mechanism — which is politically contested — but the public truth-telling function, which serves democratic consolidation by making the regime’s history part of shared public knowledge rather than contested political narrative.<sup>12</sup>
Institutional vetting — the process of screening former regime officials for participation in the new state apparatus — requires careful calibration. The Iraqi de-Baathification experience, discussed in previous papers, demonstrates the catastrophic consequences of sweeping disqualification: it removed the administrative expertise necessary for basic governance while generating a large pool of motivated opponents with nothing to lose. A more calibrated Iranian vetting process would distinguish between senior officials with decision-making responsibility for serious human rights violations — who should face criminal prosecution rather than administrative exclusion — and the much larger population of mid-level bureaucrats, security personnel, and state employees whose cooperation in the transition and the new state is necessary for functional governance. The latter group requires vetting for specific documented violations rather than blanket disqualification based on former employment.<sup>13</sup>
Economic restitution for victims of the bonyad and Setad confiscation systems represents a distinct but related transitional justice challenge. The systematic confiscation of the property of political opponents, religious minorities, and departing Iranians — documented most comprehensively in the Reuters investigation of Setad analyzed in White Paper 1 — created a vast redistribution of wealth that any transitional justice framework must address. Full restitution to all claimants is probably impossible given the scale of the confiscation and the passage of time; a claims commission process similar to those established in post-communist Eastern Europe, combined with a general framework for the redistribution of bonyad assets to public purposes, provides a more realistic model.<sup>14</sup>
5. Security Sector Transformation: The IRGC Problem
Why This Is the Central Institutional Challenge
Of all the institutional challenges facing a post-mullah Iran, the transformation of the security sector — and specifically the disposition of the IRGC — is the most consequential for democratic consolidation. A transition that defeats the regime politically but leaves the IRGC’s institutional structure, economic empire, and coercive capacity intact has not achieved democratic governance; it has achieved a change of political management over a praetorian state apparatus that will reassert its interests through whatever means are available. Conversely, an attempt to dissolve the IRGC rapidly and comprehensively — the de-Baathification approach — risks generating the armed spoiler coalition that could make democratic consolidation impossible.
The IRGC’s specific institutional characteristics make this challenge unusually complex. As analyzed in White Paper 1, the IRGC is simultaneously a military force, an intelligence apparatus, a political network, and an economic empire. Its transformation therefore requires addressing each of these dimensions separately, with sequencing that recognizes their different urgencies and their different institutional logics. Military reform and intelligence reform require different approaches from economic reform, and all three require different approaches from the political demobilization of the IRGC’s networks within civilian government.<sup>15</sup>
The Military Dimension
The military transformation challenge involves the relationship between the IRGC’s force structure and the regular Artesh, and the creation of a unified national military that is constitutionally subordinated to civilian democratic authority. The comparative model most relevant to Iran is not Germany’s post-World War II Innere Führung (a comprehensive re-education of the military in democratic norms, appropriate for a case where the military was utterly defeated) but rather the post-authoritarian transitions of Spain, South Korea, and Chile, in which military establishments that had been deeply involved in authoritarian governance were gradually subordinated to civilian authority through a combination of institutional reform, personnel management, and the gradual development of a military culture that defined professionalism in terms of constitutional loyalty rather than political authority.<sup>16</sup>
For Iran, this process would require: the formal abolition of the IRGC as a parallel military structure, with its conventional military forces integrated into a unified national defense establishment under civilian ministry authority; the retention of military professionals — at all ranks, including IRGC ranks — who demonstrate genuine commitment to constitutional governance and whose specific human rights record does not preclude service; and the development of constitutional and legal frameworks that define the military’s role as national defense rather than internal security, removing the legal basis for deploying military forces against civilian protesters. The Basij, as an instrument of internal political control rather than national defense, has no legitimate role in a democratic security architecture and should be formally dissolved, with its members offered pathways to either civilian employment or integration into a civilian police force under strict human rights standards.<sup>17</sup>
The Intelligence Dimension
The transformation of Iran’s fragmented intelligence apparatus — the MOIS, the IRGC Intelligence Organization, the Supreme Leader’s personal intelligence office — into a security service that is democratically accountable, constitutionally constrained, and focused on genuine national security threats rather than political surveillance represents one of the most technically demanding components of security sector reform. Intelligence services are, by their nature, resistant to transparency; their transformation requires institutional redesign that creates accountability without destroying operational capacity.
The comparative model most applicable to Iran is the post-apartheid transformation of South Africa’s intelligence services, which involved the merging of multiple apartheid-era security organizations with the ANC’s intelligence structures into a new National Intelligence Agency under parliamentary oversight, combined with a vetting process that screened personnel for serious human rights violations. The South African process was imperfect — it left significant apartheid-era networks intact within the new services — but it produced functional intelligence services under democratic governance rather than a complete institutional collapse that would have left the new state blind to genuine security threats.<sup>18</sup>
The Economic Dimension
The dismantling of the IRGC’s economic empire is both the most politically consequential and the most technically complex component of security sector transformation. As analyzed in White Paper 1, the IRGC controls an estimated 20–40 percent of Iran’s formal economy, with additional dominance over significant informal and sanctions-evasion activity. Dismantling this empire rapidly and completely risks creating economic chaos — disrupting enterprises that employ hundreds of thousands of workers — while leaving it intact perpetuates the IRGC’s capacity to fund political reconstitution from its economic resources.
A phased approach is more viable than rapid comprehensive dismantling. In the immediate transition period, IRGC-controlled enterprises should be placed under independent receivership, their revenues directed to public accounts rather than IRGC-controlled funds, and their governance transferred to professional management under civilian ministry oversight. Over a three-to-five year period, enterprises that operate in competitive markets should be privatized through transparent processes — not, as occurred in post-communist Eastern Europe, in ways that transfer them to well-connected insiders, but through mechanisms designed to distribute ownership broadly and reduce the concentration of economic power that the bonyad system represents. Enterprises in strategic sectors — energy infrastructure, telecommunications — should be maintained as state enterprises under democratic oversight rather than privatized in ways that create private monopolies as problematic as the IRGC’s were.<sup>19</sup>
The Political Demobilization Dimension
The IRGC’s penetration of civilian government — provincial administration, ministry positions, university leadership, and state media — analyzed in White Paper 1 as a generational shift from clerical to military-clerical governance, requires a distinct institutional response from its military and economic transformation. Political demobilization involves the removal of IRGC-affiliated personnel from civilian government positions, the restoration of civilian professional expertise to public administration, and the redesign of civil service recruitment and promotion processes to eliminate the political loyalty criteria that the IRGC’s colonization of civilian institutions has introduced.
This process must be calibrated to distinguish between IRGC-affiliated officials who hold positions because of political connections and those who hold positions because of genuine professional competence — some of whom exist even within the IRGC-penetrated civil service. Blanket dismissal of all personnel with IRGC connections would deplete the human capital available for governance at precisely the moment when governance capacity is most needed. A vetting process focused on specific documented political loyalty functions — surveillance, coercion, ideological enforcement — rather than IRGC affiliation per se provides a more defensible and more functionally sound approach.
6. Economic Reconstruction: Inheriting a Damaged Economy
The Economic Legacy
Any post-mullah government will inherit an economy in severe distress. As analyzed in White Paper 3, decades of sanctions, structural mismanagement, and IRGC economic predation have produced an economy characterized by high inflation, currency collapse, youth unemployment in the range of 25–40 percent, inadequate infrastructure, and an energy sector that despite its enormous resource base has been systematically underinvested. The bonyad system has captured a significant fraction of the economy’s productive capacity in institutions that are opaque, unaccountable, and managed for factional rather than productive purposes. Environmental degradation — including major water crises, air quality emergencies in major cities, and the near-disappearance of major water bodies — represents an economic liability of the first order that has received insufficient attention in opposition transition planning.<sup>20</sup>
The Sanctions Relief Question
The most immediate economic question for any post-transition government is the pace and conditions of sanctions relief. International economic sanctions — particularly US secondary sanctions that restrict Iran’s access to the international financial system — have been the primary instrument of external economic pressure on the regime, and their removal is the most significant near-term economic resource available to a post-transition government for stabilization and reconstruction.
The pace of sanctions relief will depend partly on international actors’ assessment of the transition’s democratic credibility — which is itself an argument for the institutional framework analyzed in this paper, since a transition that demonstrates genuine democratic architecture is more likely to achieve rapid international normalization than one that merely changes political management without structural reform. The economic benefits of sanctions relief are real but not sufficient on their own: Iran’s economic problems are structural as well as sanctions-driven, and a post-transition government that assumes sanctions relief alone will solve its economic challenges will be disappointed. The bonyad system’s distortions, the energy sector’s underinvestment, the human capital losses from decades of brain drain, and the environmental debts that the Islamic Republic accumulated are structural problems that require structural reform regardless of sanctions status.<sup>21</sup>
Reconstruction Priorities
The comparative literature on post-authoritarian economic reconstruction suggests several priority sequencing decisions. Macroeconomic stabilization — controlling inflation, stabilizing the currency, and establishing fiscal credibility — must precede structural reform; attempting comprehensive economic restructuring in an unstable macroeconomic environment is a recipe for both economic failure and political backlash against the transition itself. The immediate transitional period should focus on achieving macroeconomic stability, using sanctions relief revenues for direct support of household incomes during the adjustment period, and establishing the institutional framework — an independent central bank, a transparent fiscal authority, a functioning financial regulatory system — necessary for sustainable growth.<sup>22</sup>
The oil and gas sector’s reconstruction requires particular attention. Iran possesses the world’s second-largest natural gas reserves and fourth-largest oil reserves, and the revenue from developing these resources is the primary source of financing for both economic reconstruction and the social services whose restoration is necessary for democratic stabilization. The governance framework for these resources — including the specific fiscal arrangements for sharing revenues between the central state and resource-producing regions, and the regulatory framework for international investment — will have long-term consequences for both economic development and ethnic political stability that justify early and serious institutional attention.
The bonyad system’s assets, once brought under democratic governance as described in the security sector section above, represent a significant public resource whose deployment can serve both economic development and transitional justice goals. The Bonyad Mostazafin’s agricultural and industrial holdings, deployed under competent professional management with public accountability, could make a meaningful contribution to economic reconstruction. The use of Setad’s asset base for a transitional reparations fund — compensating victims of the regime’s confiscation and human rights violations — represents a form of transitional justice that is simultaneously economically sound and symbolically powerful.<sup>23</sup>
7. International Recognition and Regional Stabilization
The Regional Environment
Iran’s democratic transition, if achieved, would occur in a regional environment that is not uniformly supportive of its consolidation. Turkey has historically been concerned about Kurdish political developments in Iran and their implications for its own Kurdish population. Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states, while uniformly hostile to the Islamic Republic, may not uniformly welcome a genuinely democratic Iran that might eventually challenge their own authoritarian governance models. Russia has significant interests in maintaining Iranian economic dependency and in preventing Iran’s integration into Western-oriented economic and security frameworks. Israel’s relationship with a post-mullah Iran involves complex historical and security considerations that go beyond the Islamic Republic’s ideological hostility. And Iraq, whose Shi’a political landscape is deeply intertwined with Iranian political and religious networks, would experience any Iranian political transition as a significant external shock to its own domestic political balance.<sup>24</sup>
International Recognition
The pace and terms of international recognition for a transitional Iranian government will significantly affect its domestic legitimacy and its capacity to access the international economic resources — sanctions relief, international financial institution lending, foreign direct investment — necessary for economic stabilization. A transitional government that achieves rapid recognition from major international actors gains both economic resources and domestic legitimacy; one that faces prolonged recognition disputes enters the constitutional design period with weakened economic capacity and a legitimacy deficit that populist and authoritarian forces can exploit.
The conditions for international recognition will be partly determined by the democratic credibility of the transition process — the extent to which the transitional governance framework demonstrates genuine representativeness and commitment to constitutional governance — and partly by geopolitical considerations that are only partially within the transitional government’s control. The most important international relationship for Iran’s post-transition development is the restoration of normal economic relations with the United States and the European Union — not for any ideological reason but because these relationships determine the pace of sanctions relief and access to international financial markets that are the primary near-term economic resource for reconstruction.<sup>25</sup>
The Nuclear Question
Iran’s nuclear program represents a specific international dimension of transition that must be addressed explicitly in any transition framework. The Islamic Republic’s nuclear development — widely assessed as having achieved near-weapons capability even if formal weaponization decisions remain officially unacknowledged — is the primary source of international sanctions and the primary obstacle to the rapid economic normalization that a post-transition government would need. A post-mullah government faces a specific strategic choice: maintain the nuclear program as a deterrent and accept continuing international restriction, or trade the program for the economic normalization that democratic consolidation requires.
The comparative evidence from similar cases — South Africa’s dismantling of its nuclear program after apartheid, Ukraine’s transfer of Soviet nuclear weapons in exchange for security guarantees — suggests that transitional governments facing severe economic challenges and seeking rapid international integration have strong incentives to trade nuclear capability for economic normalization. A post-mullah government that made credible commitments to nuclear transparency and non-weaponization in exchange for comprehensive sanctions relief would be in a significantly stronger position for democratic consolidation than one that attempted to maintain nuclear ambiguity while seeking economic normalization. This is not a recommendation about Iran’s long-term security interests — that is a question for a democratically legitimate Iranian government to determine — but an analysis of the transitional period’s specific trade-offs.<sup>26</sup>
Regional Stabilization
The IRGC’s regional proxy network — Hezbollah, the Houthis, Iraqi Shi’a militias, and others — represents both a security challenge and an international relations question for any post-transition government. The network was built by the IRGC as an instrument of Iranian regional power projection, at significant financial cost to Iranian taxpayers who received no democratic input into this decision. A post-transition government would face pressure from the international community to dismantle these networks, pressure from domestic audiences who regard the financial costs as a diversion of resources from internal needs, and pressure from the regional actors themselves who have developed autonomous interests and capacities that will not simply dissolve because Tehran’s political orientation has changed.
The most realistic framework for managing this transition is a combination of financial disengagement — ending the Quds Force’s financial support for proxy forces — and diplomatic engagement that creates negotiated frameworks for the political integration of these forces into their respective national political systems. Hezbollah’s integration into Lebanese politics, the Houthis’ integration into a Yemeni political settlement, and the Iraqi militia networks’ integration into Iraq’s security sector are all processes with their own dynamics and timelines that a post-mullah Iran can facilitate but not control. The transitional government’s primary responsibility is to end the financial and organizational support that the IRGC has provided, while supporting rather than obstructing the regional diplomatic processes that address the underlying conflicts these networks have exploited.<sup>27</sup>
8. The Sequencing Problem: Elections Before Institutions or Institutions Before Elections?
Why Sequencing Matters
One of the most consequential and most contested questions in democratic transition design is the sequencing of elections relative to institution-building. The “elections first” approach — holding elections as quickly as possible after the regime’s fall to establish democratic legitimacy — has the advantage of speed and the disadvantage of vulnerability: elections held before constitutional frameworks, judicial institutions, and administrative infrastructure are in place tend to produce governments with electoral mandates but without the institutional capacity to exercise them, and in the worst cases produce electoral victories by anti-democratic forces who use their electoral mandates to dismantle the democratic framework that produced them. The “institutions first” approach — establishing constitutional, judicial, and administrative institutions before holding elections — has the advantage of creating the framework within which democratic politics can be conducted, and the disadvantage of requiring transitional authority to exercise power without electoral legitimacy for a sustained period, which is both inherently unstable and potentially exploitable by transitional authorities who extend their tenure indefinitely.<sup>28</sup>
The Iranian Sequencing Problem
The Iranian case contains specific features that make the sequencing question unusually consequential. The absence of pre-existing democratic party infrastructure means that rapid elections would likely produce results dominated by the most organizationally prepared forces — potentially including reconstituted IRGC-adjacent networks, hardline religious conservatives, or ethnic nationalist maximalists — rather than the democratic forces whose mobilization produced the transition. The ethnic diversity of the country means that elections held before ethnic political demands have been addressed through a constitutional framework risk producing either the suppression of ethnic minority political aspirations through majoritarian processes or the fragmentation of the electoral landscape along ethnic lines in ways that produce ungovernable coalition governments.
On the other hand, a post-mullah government that delays elections indefinitely — using the institutions-first rationale as a cover for perpetuating transitional authority — would rapidly lose the democratic legitimacy that distinguishes a genuine transition from a regime change that substitutes one form of authoritarian governance for another. The history of “transitional” governments that became permanent features of their political landscapes — Egypt’s SCAF, Iraq’s Coalition Provisional Authority, Libya’s General National Congress — demonstrates that the institutions-first rationale can be abused in ways that are as damaging to democratic consolidation as premature elections.<sup>29</sup>
A Sequencing Framework for Iran
The most defensible sequencing framework for Iran combines the legitimacy advantages of elections with the institutional prerequisites for meaningful democratic choice, through a carefully designed sequence with constitutional time limits. The first phase — covering approximately the first six months after regime change — would focus on establishing basic security and governance capacity, forming the transitional council described above, and initiating the truth and reconciliation process. No elections would be held in this phase, but the transitional council’s composition and decision-making procedures would be explicitly negotiated and publicly documented to provide the transparency necessary for its provisional legitimacy.
The second phase — approximately months six through eighteen — would focus on constitutional design: the election of a constitutional assembly (through elections with a specifically limited mandate of constitutional drafting rather than governance), the drafting process itself with full public participation, and the final constitutional referendum. Elections for a constitutional assembly are less high-stakes than elections for a governing parliament and allow the development of basic electoral infrastructure — voter rolls, electoral commission capacity, party organization — without the full weight of governmental authority riding on the outcome. The constitutional assembly model, used successfully in Tunisia and South Africa, provides electoral legitimacy for the drafting process without the premature governance elections that have damaged other transitions.
The third phase — approximately months eighteen through thirty — would implement the constitutional framework through elections for the institutions it creates: parliament, executive, regional governments, and the constitutional court. By this point, the basic institutional infrastructure for democratic governance — electoral administration, independent judiciary, reformed security sector — should be sufficiently developed to support meaningful elections rather than organizational capture by the best-resourced political actors.<sup>30</sup>
9. Case Studies: Learning from Comparable Transitions
Spain (1975–1978): The Managed Transition Model
Spain’s transition from Francoism to democracy following Franco’s death in 1975 remains the most studied and most cited model for managed authoritarian transitions, and several of its features are directly relevant to Iran’s circumstances. The transition’s success rested on a combination of factors: a monarch (Juan Carlos I) willing to use inherited authority to support rather than obstruct democratic transition; a reformist faction within the incumbent regime (the aperturistas) who concluded that managed transition was preferable to continued resistance to an increasingly unmanageable democratic demand; opposition forces sufficiently disciplined to accept negotiated terms rather than maximalist demands; and a European economic integration process that provided both external support and economic incentives for democratic consolidation.
For Iran, the Spanish precedent is most directly applicable in two respects. First, the model of a transitional figure with institutional authority using that authority to legitimize democratic processes — rather than simply winning a power struggle — is relevant to the IRGC and clerical fracture scenarios analyzed in White Paper 3. A senior IRGC commander or clerical figure who made a credible commitment to democratic transition would play a functionally similar role to Juan Carlos I’s in the Spanish case, regardless of the ideological differences between the contexts. Second, Spain’s management of the Basque and Catalan autonomy demands through the Estado de las Autonomías — an asymmetric federal framework developed after rather than before the central democratic transition — provides one model for how the ethnic federalism question might be managed through post-transition negotiation rather than requiring pre-transition resolution.<sup>31</sup>
South Africa (1990–1994): The Negotiated Transition Model
South Africa’s transition from apartheid, achieved through the negotiated process of the Convention for a Democratic South Africa (CODESA) and its successor Multi-Party Negotiating Process, is relevant to Iran primarily for its institutional innovations in managing a transition in which the incumbent regime and the opposition had to reach mutually acceptable terms despite profound historical antagonism and genuine mutual distrust.
The key institutional innovations were: sunset clauses that guaranteed the existing civil service and security apparatus a defined period of employment under the new government, removing their incentive to obstruct transition; an interim constitution that established basic governance rules for the transitional period while a permanent constitution was being drafted; a constitutional court that was constitutionally mandated to certify the permanent constitution against a set of agreed constitutional principles — providing a mechanism for resolving disputes between the drafting assembly and the negotiating parties that had agreed those principles; and a Truth and Reconciliation Commission whose combination of amnesty and accountability provided a framework for addressing the apartheid era’s crimes without either impunity or the comprehensive prosecution that would have driven former regime elements into a spoiler coalition.
For Iran, the CODESA model’s most applicable feature is the sunset clause mechanism, adapted to provide IRGC personnel who demonstrate genuine commitment to democratic transition a defined period of protected employment — effectively removing their material incentive to obstruct the transition — while the institutional framework for a reformed security sector is developed. The constitutional certification mechanism is also directly applicable: a set of agreed constitutional principles, negotiated before the constitutional assembly begins its work, provides a framework for managing the disputes about constitutional content that will inevitably arise between factions with different interests and visions.<sup>32</sup>
Iraq (2003–2006): The Cautionary Tale
Iraq’s post-Saddam transition is included here not as a model to emulate but as a systematic illustration of how not to manage post-authoritarian transition, and as a source of specific lessons for Iranian transition designers who must avoid replicating its failures.
Iraq’s transition failed in ways that are directly relevant to Iran. De-Baathification was implemented as a blanket disqualification rather than a targeted accountability process, removing administrative expertise and creating a large population of motivated spoilers. The army’s dissolution created an immediate security vacuum and armed tens of thousands of men with military training and no employment. Constitutional and electoral processes were compressed into timelines that prevented genuine deliberation, producing a constitution that was ratified before its ethnic and sectarian implications were fully understood and that locked in the conflictual dynamics it was supposed to manage. And external management of the transition — the Coalition Provisional Authority’s exercise of authority without democratic legitimacy — created a legitimacy deficit that Iraqi democratic institutions never fully overcame.
The Iranian-specific lesson from Iraq is the dissolution problem: the temptation to rapidly dissolve the IRGC and all associated institutions, driven by the entirely legitimate desire to eliminate the regime’s coercive apparatus, must be resisted in favor of the managed transformation approach analyzed in this paper. A dissolved IRGC’s 100,000–600,000 members, with their weapons, their training, their networks, and their grievances, would represent a threat to Iranian democratic consolidation potentially as severe as the Islamic Republic itself.<sup>33</sup>
Tunisia (2011–2014): The Incomplete Success
Tunisia’s post-Arab Spring transition is the most directly relevant recent comparator for Iranian transition planners, and its partial success and subsequent deterioration both provide important lessons. Tunisia succeeded in producing a democratic constitution (2014) through a genuinely participatory process that accommodated both secular and Islamist political currents, established an independent electoral commission, and managed the initial post-transition elections without significant violence. It subsequently failed — or more precisely, its democracy was dismantled by President Kais Saied’s constitutional coup of 2021, which used democratic legitimacy to concentrate power in the executive and effectively end the democratic experiment.
Tunisia’s trajectory demonstrates several things relevant to Iran. First, constitutional design is necessary but not sufficient for democratic consolidation: a well-designed constitution can be circumvented by a determined executive who exploits public disillusionment with a poorly performing democratic government. Second, economic performance matters for democratic consolidation: Tunisia’s democratic period coincided with sustained economic difficulty, and public disillusionment with the economic results of democracy provided the political space for Saied’s authoritarian turn. Third, the specific constitutional design of presidential versus parliamentary power matters: Tunisia’s semi-presidential constitution left ambiguous the division of authority between president and prime minister, and this ambiguity was exploited in the constitutional crisis that preceded the coup.<sup>34</sup>
10. The Minimum Institutional Conditions: A Synthesis
Drawing together the analysis of the preceding sections, what are the minimum institutional conditions that must be secured in the first eighteen months to prevent transition failure? The comparative evidence, combined with the specific analysis of Iran’s political landscape, suggests the following irreducible minimum.
First, a transitional governance framework with genuine representativeness — including explicit representation of ethnic minority communities with meaningful veto authority over decisions affecting their regions — must be established within the first thirty days of transition. The longer the period in which transitional governance is exercised by a non-representative body, the more deeply entrenched the exclusions of that body become and the harder it is to achieve genuine representation in subsequent processes.
Second, the IRGC’s military operations must be brought under civilian transitional authority within the first sixty days, with IRGC conventional forces integrated into a unified national command structure under the transitional council’s oversight. Failure to achieve this in the transition’s first weeks risks the reconstitution of a parallel security apparatus outside democratic control.
Third, the bonyad system and Setad must be placed under independent receivership within the first sixty days, with their revenues directed to public accounts. Failure to achieve this allows the regime’s financial apparatus to fund political reconstitution regardless of the formal political transition.
Fourth, a truth and reconciliation process must be initiated within the first ninety days, providing victims’ communities with an official acknowledgment of their suffering and beginning the social processing of the regime’s history that democratic consolidation requires. The establishment of this process — even before it produces specific outcomes — signals to victims’ communities that accountability is a genuine transitional commitment rather than a deferral.
Fifth, the constitutional assembly election must occur within six months, providing democratic legitimacy for the constitutional design process and establishing the timetable within which the transitional governance framework must transfer authority to constitutionally established institutions.
Sixth, the minimum entrenched rights framework — gender equality, freedom of religion and conscience, minority language rights, freedom of expression and association, and labor rights — must be specified as constitutional principles agreed by the transitional council before the constitutional assembly election, providing the framework within which the assembly’s drafting must operate.
Seventh, international recognition and the initiation of sanctions relief negotiations must be achieved within the first thirty days, providing the economic stabilization resources necessary to prevent the economic deterioration of the transition period from generating the popular disillusionment that derails democratic consolidation.
None of these conditions is achievable through improvisation. All of them require preparation — the development of specific institutional designs, the negotiation of specific political agreements among opposition forces, and the development of international diplomatic relationships — before the transition occurs. The central institutional argument of this entire suite of papers is that the Iranian opposition’s most urgent task is not simply achieving the transition but preparing for it with the seriousness that its difficulty demands.
Conclusion: The Work Before the Work
This paper — and this suite — has been fundamentally about the work before the work. Defeating the Islamic Republic is the work that the Iranian opposition has been doing with remarkable courage and persistence across four decades of protest, imprisonment, exile, and martyrdom. Preparing for what comes after the defeat is the work that has been insufficiently done — not because of a lack of intelligence or commitment among opposition leaders and thinkers, but because the urgency of resistance has consistently crowded out the longer-horizon work of institutional preparation.
The argument of this suite of five papers is that these two categories of work are not separable. The preparation for transition is itself a contribution to achieving transition, because a credible post-regime vision — one that addresses the ethnic federalism question honestly, that gives religious Iranians confidence that democracy does not mean hostility to faith, that gives working-class Iranians confidence that democratic governance addresses their economic interests, and that gives wavering regime insiders a reason to stand aside rather than fight to the last — is a political asset in the fight to end the Islamic Republic that the opposition currently does not possess. The institutional architecture analyzed in this final paper is therefore not merely technical preparation for a future that may be years away. It is part of the political project of making that future achievable.
Iran’s people have demonstrated, across four decades and in the face of a coercive apparatus of extraordinary sophistication and ruthlessness, that they have not accepted the Islamic Republic as their permanent condition. The question this suite has tried to answer — not definitively, because definitive answers are not available, but rigorously — is whether the conditions for a different condition can be created from within, and what those conditions would need to look like to produce not merely a transition but a genuine democratic consolidation. The answer is yes, with significant qualifications, specific requirements, and the honest acknowledgment that both the obstacles and the opportunities are greater than either the optimists or the pessimists in this debate have been willing to concede.
Notes
- The mechanisms of democratic transition failure are analyzed with comparative rigor in Linz & Stepan (1996), Levitsky & Way (2010), and Waldner & Lust (2018). The Egyptian case — in which the Supreme Council of the Armed Forces managed the post-Mubarak transition in ways that ultimately produced military rule under different branding — is analyzed in detail in Brownlee et al. (2015). The Weimar economic collapse–democratic failure nexus is documented in Shirer (1960) and analyzed theoretically in Bermeo (2003). The Algerian 1992 case is analyzed in Willis (1996). The Iranian-specific application of these failure mechanisms is developed in Arjomand (2009) and Brumberg (2001).
- The authority problem in democratic transitions is identified as foundational in O’Donnell & Schmitter (1986) and developed with greater specificity in Elster et al. (1998), whose analysis of post-communist constitution-making addresses the circular legitimacy problem — transitional authority must make constitutional decisions whose legitimacy depends on the constitutional framework that does not yet exist — with particular clarity. For the specific Iranian version of this problem, see Tezcür (2010) and the workshop papers from the Iran 2040 Project at the RAND Corporation.
- The eighteen-to-twenty-four month timeframe for transitional governance before constitutional elections is derived from the comparative analysis of post-authoritarian transitions in Ginsburg & Huq (2018). The analysis finds that transitions with transitional periods shorter than twelve months tend to produce premature elections that favor organizationally prepared forces over democratically representative ones, while those with transitional periods longer than thirty-six months tend to entrench transitional authorities in ways that are difficult to reverse. The specific design of transitional councils with ethnic minority veto provisions draws on the CODESA model analyzed in Friedman (1993) and adapted to the Iranian ethnic composition by drawing on Elling (2013) and Shaffer (2002).
- The relationship between constitutional process and constitutional legitimacy is analyzed in Hart (2003), who examines how the procedural legitimacy of constitutional design processes contributes to the substantive legitimacy of the resulting documents. The comparative finding that participatory processes produce more durable constitutions than elite-drafted ones — even when the substantive content of the documents is similar — is developed in Elkins et al. (2009), whose analysis of constitutional duration across 935 national constitutions finds that participatory design processes are among the strongest predictors of constitutional longevity.
- The specific requirements for an Iranian constitutional design process are analyzed in Gheissari & Nasr (2006) and, from a constitutional law perspective, in Sadeghi (2019). The requirement for ethnic minority representation in constitutional drafting is supported by both the normative arguments in Kymlicka (1995) and the empirical findings in Cornell (2002), who shows that federal arrangements designed without genuine minority community participation have significantly lower durability than those negotiated with minority community involvement.
- The institutional design evidence on presidential versus parliamentary versus semi-presidential systems is reviewed in Linz & Valenzuela (1994), who argue for parliamentary systems’ democratic stability advantages, and in Cheibub (2007), who complicates this argument by showing that the correlation between presidentialism and democratic failure is substantially explained by the regional distribution of presidential systems rather than by presidential institutions per se. For the Iranian-specific institutional design debate, see Abootalebi (1999) and the platform documents of various Iranian constitutional reform organizations, which are analyzed in Sadeghi (2019).
- The religion-state relationship in constitutional design is analyzed with particular relevance to Muslim-majority societies in Feldman (2008), who argues that the polarization between strict secularism and religious governance misses the more successful models of constitutional democracy that accommodate religious expression without establishing religious authority. For the specific Iranian context, Arjomand (2009) and Brumberg (2001) both analyze the political risks of strict constitutional secularism in a society where religious identity, even if declining in institutional observance, remains a significant component of cultural and personal identity.
- The specific entrenched rights framework proposed here draws on the comparative analysis in Elkins et al. (2009), who identify the rights most predictive of constitutional durability, and on the specific Iranian political landscape analyzed in White Paper 4. The inclusion of labor rights as a constitutional essential — rather than merely a legislative option — reflects the central role of labor organizing in the internal opposition’s organizational infrastructure and the Islamic Republic’s systematic suppression of labor rights as a mechanism of political control. The ILO conventions on freedom of association and collective bargaining provide the international legal standard against which the constitutional labor rights framework should be calibrated.
- The accountability-reconciliation tension in transitional justice is analyzed theoretically in Teitel (2000), whose concept of “transitional jurisprudence” addresses how legal frameworks adapt to the specific demands of political transition, and empirically in the comparative studies in Olsen et al. (2010), who analyze the outcomes of different transitional justice mechanisms across ninety-one countries in transition. The consistent finding is that combinations of mechanisms — prosecution, TRC, lustration, reparations — produce better outcomes for both democratic consolidation and human rights than any single mechanism deployed alone.
- The 1988 prison massacres are documented most comprehensively in Montazeri (2001) — whose memoir includes his own correspondence with Khomeini protesting the executions — Abrahamian (1999), and the reports of Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch based on survivor testimony. The death toll estimates range from approximately 2,800 (the regime’s implicit minimum, derived from the number of execution orders it has acknowledged) to 5,000 or higher (Amnesty International and Nouri trial evidence). The Hamid Nouri trial, conducted in Stockholm between 2021 and 2022 under Sweden’s universal jurisdiction statute, produced a conviction based on extensive documentary evidence and survivor testimony that established a substantial evidentiary record useful for any future domestic prosecution.
- The framework for selective criminal prosecution in transitional contexts is developed in Sikkink (2011), whose analysis of the justice cascade — the global spread of human rights accountability norms — provides theoretical support for the claim that individual criminal accountability for the most serious violations contributes to democratic consolidation by establishing the norm that state power does not provide impunity for atrocity. The specific application to senior IRGC and intelligence officials is supported by the evidence in Amnesty International (2023) and the UN Special Rapporteur reports, which document the command responsibility chain for specific decisions to use lethal force against protesters.
- The South African TRC model is analyzed in Wilson (2001), who provides a critical assessment that acknowledges both the TRC’s genuine contributions — creating an official public record, providing victims with acknowledgment, facilitating perpetrator disclosure — and its limitations, including the inadequate follow-through on criminal prosecution that undermined accountability norms. For the specific adaptability of the TRC model to Iranian conditions, the key design questions are whether the amnesty mechanism can be credibly tied to full disclosure (which the South African TRC struggled to enforce) and whether the truth-telling function can be conducted with sufficient independence from transitional political actors to maintain credibility.
- The calibrated lustration approach draws on the comparative analysis in Stan (2009), who examines lustration processes across post-communist Europe and finds that the most successful — those that removed the most seriously compromised officials without creating governance vacuums — were those that focused on documented specific violations rather than blanket category disqualifications. The Czech and Polish models are identified as relatively successful; the Romanian and Bulgarian models as relatively unsuccessful, primarily because of the breadth of their disqualification criteria. The Iraqi de-Baathification experience is analyzed in Allawi (2007) and Ricks (2006) as the paradigmatic case of overly broad disqualification criteria producing governance failure.
- Post-communist property restitution models are analyzed in van Atta (1998) and Blacksell & Born (2002). The Iranian confiscation system’s specific complexity — involving both formal legal confiscations through the Revolutionary Court system and informal coercive transfers through the bonyad and Setad structures — means that any claims process will face significant documentation challenges. The Hungarian and Czech property restitution models, which distinguished between claims for restitution in kind (return of specific properties) and claims for compensation (monetary equivalent) based on current use and social impact, provide potentially applicable frameworks for managing the scale of Iranian confiscation claims.
- The IRGC’s specific institutional complexity — its combination of military, intelligence, economic, and political functions — makes it unlike any security sector reform case in the comparative literature, though it has analogies to the apartheid-era South African security apparatus, the pre-transition Chilean military’s economic empire under Pinochet, and to a lesser extent the role of the military in post-Suharto Indonesia. The analysis here draws on all three comparators while acknowledging the limits of the analogy. For the specific IRGC reform challenge, see Wehrey et al. (2009) and Thaler et al. (2010), who remain the most analytically comprehensive treatments despite the passage of time since their publication.
- The comparative models for civil-military relations reform in post-authoritarian transitions are analyzed in Huntington (1991), Stepan (1988), and Cottey et al. (2002). The Spanish model — gradual civilian authority establishment over a military with deep authoritarian roots — is directly analyzed in Agüero (1995). The South Korean model, in which a military that had repeatedly intervened in politics was gradually professionalized and de-politicized through a combination of institutional reform and the development of democratic civilian expertise in security matters, is analyzed in Kim (1997). Both models emphasize that civil-military relations reform is a decades-long process rather than a transition-period achievement, which has implications for realistic assessment of what can be accomplished in Iran’s first eighteen months.
- The specific constitutional and legal framework for the Basij’s dissolution is discussed in Golkar (2015) and in the white paper literature produced by various Iranian opposition think tanks. The key design question is whether Basij personnel should be offered civilian reintegration pathways — employment, education, social services — that reduce their motivation to organize as a political spoiler network, or whether the organization’s specific role as an instrument of political coercion is sufficiently distinctive from ordinary security sector employment to justify the reputational costs of association with former Basij members in the new state’s civilian services.
- The South African intelligence transformation is analyzed in Laurence (1999) and in the more recent assessment in the South African Parliamentary Intelligence Oversight Committee reports. The failure to fully cleanse the new intelligence services of apartheid-era networks — documented most dramatically in the subsequent career of Renamo handlers and former security branch operatives within the new National Intelligence Agency — represents a genuine limitation of the South African model that Iranian transition designers should specifically plan to avoid through more rigorous vetting criteria.
- The phased approach to IRGC economic transformation draws on the comparative analysis of military economic enterprises in post-authoritarian transitions in Goldfrank (2011) and Cook (2007). The Chilean case — in which the military’s significant copper revenue interests were gradually reduced through a combination of legislative action and renegotiated constitutional arrangements — provides one model for managing the political economy of military economic demobilization. The Indonesian case — in which the military’s business empire under Suharto was reduced after his fall through a combination of civilian budget substitution and legislative restrictions on military business activity — provides another, though with the caution that the reduction was slower and less complete than reformers had intended.
- Iran’s environmental degradation has been systematically documented by the Department of Environment of Iran (whose reports have been made available through academic channels despite the regime’s restrictions on unflattering data), the United Nations Environment Programme, and academic research centers. The Urmia Lake crisis — in which one of the world’s largest saltwater lakes lost approximately 80 percent of its surface area between 1995 and 2015 due to water diversion for agriculture and industrial use — is the most dramatic single case. Water stress in Isfahan, the Zayandeh Rud basin, and Khuzestan has produced specific political crises that are analyzed in Abbasi et al. (2022).
- The economics of post-transition sanctions relief are analyzed in Hufbauer et al. (2007) and, for the specific Iranian case, in Katzman (2023) and the IMF’s Article IV consultations. The academic literature on the relationship between foreign investment, sanctions relief, and democratic consolidation — reviewed in Marinov (2005) and Peksen (2009) — suggests that the pace of economic benefit from sanctions relief depends critically on the quality of domestic institutions established during the transition period, providing an economic argument for the institutional investment priorities analyzed throughout this paper.
- The macroeconomic stabilization-before-reform sequencing principle is derived from the transition economics literature, particularly Fischer et al. (1996) and Sachs (1993), who analyzed post-communist economic transitions. The specific application to Iran is complicated by the oil revenue question: unlike most post-communist transitions, Iran has a potential large resource revenue base that can finance stabilization without the severe fiscal austerity that produced political backlash in Eastern Europe. The oil revenue governance challenge — preventing the resource curse dynamics that have characterized Iranian economic governance under the Islamic Republic — is analyzed in Omgba (2015) and in Iran-specific terms in Maloney (2015).
- The bonyad asset redistribution question is addressed in Maloney (2000) and, from a property rights perspective, in Blacksell & Born (2002). The specific proposal to use Setad assets for a transitional reparations fund has been advanced by various Iranian human rights organizations including the Defenders of Human Rights Center (founded by Shirin Ebadi) and the Iran Human Rights Documentation Center. The legal basis for using confiscated assets for reparations purposes is well-established in international transitional justice practice, drawing on the precedents established in post-Holocaust reparations programs and post-apartheid South African reparations.
- The regional environment for an Iranian democratic transition is analyzed in Vatanka (2015) and Ostovar (2016). Turkey’s specific concerns about Kurdish political development in Iran — and their implications for the PKK/PJAK relationship — are analyzed in Gunter (2011). The Gulf state reaction to Iranian democratization is discussed in Kamrava (2018), who notes the structural tension between Gulf monarchies’ strategic interest in a weakened Iran and their tactical concern that a democratic Iran might set a regional precedent with domestic implications. Russia’s interests in Iranian political development are analyzed in Trenin & Malashenko (2010).
- The international recognition dynamics for transitional governments are analyzed in Coggins (2014), who examines the determinants of recognition speed and its effects on transitional government capacity. The consistent finding — that transitional governments with credible democratic processes achieve faster recognition and greater economic benefit from that recognition — provides an international relations argument for the institutional investment in democratic process analyzed throughout this paper. For the specific US-Iran normalization question, Parsi (2007) provides historical context on the relationship between domestic political transition in Iran and the prospects for diplomatic normalization.
- Post-apartheid South Africa’s nuclear disarmament — accomplished by F.W. de Klerk before the transition to democratic governance, specifically to prevent the ANC from inheriting nuclear weapons — is analyzed in Stumpf (1995) and Liberman (2001). Ukraine’s transfer of Soviet nuclear weapons in exchange for security guarantees (the Budapest Memorandum, 1994) is analyzed in Budjeryn (2022), whose post-2022 assessment of the memorandum’s failure to prevent Russian invasion provides cautionary lessons about the value of security guarantees as a substitute for deterrence. For Iran’s nuclear program and its relationship to transitional political dynamics, see Takeyh (2021) and the various IAEA reports documenting the technical status of Iran’s nuclear activities.
- The IRGC’s regional proxy network and its management in a post-transition framework is analyzed in Byman (2008) and Levitt (2013). The specific challenge of Hezbollah’s organizational autonomy — it has developed significant independent capacities that make it less dependent on Iranian direction than it was in its founding period — is analyzed in Blanford (2011) and Exum (2006). The Yemen Houthi case, in which IRGC support has enhanced a movement with independent political roots and motivations, is analyzed in Salisbury (2020). The Iraqi Shi’a militia landscape, the most complex in terms of the IRGC’s penetration and the militia’s autonomous political organization, is analyzed in Mansour & Jabar (2017).
- The elections-versus-institutions sequencing debate is reviewed comprehensively in Fukuyama (2014), who argues that rule of law and accountable governance institutions must precede democracy for democratic consolidation to succeed, and criticized in Carothers (2007), who argues that the institutions-first approach has been used as a rationalization for democracy deferral by authoritarian-leaning transitional governments and their international supporters. The most nuanced treatment is Mansfield & Snyder (2005), who argue that the relevant variable is not elections versus institutions per se but the specific institutional context — including judicial independence, press freedom, and civil society — within which elections are held.
- The misuse of the institutions-first rationale in Egypt, Iraq, and Libya is analyzed in Brownlee et al. (2015) and in the country-specific studies in Diamond et al. (2014). The Egyptian SCAF’s management of the post-Mubarak transition — in which the institutions-first logic was used to delay elections and then, when elections produced results unfavorable to military interests, to stage a coup — represents the most recent and instructive example of how the genuine insight that institutions matter can be weaponized against the democratic transition it nominally serves.
- The constitutional assembly model as a sequencing solution to the elections-versus-institutions debate is analyzed in Elkins et al. (2009) and in the specific comparative cases of Tunisia (2011–2014), South Africa (1994–1996), and Colombia (1991). The model’s advantage — using elections to legitimize the constitutional design process rather than the full governmental structure — is that it creates democratic legitimacy for constitution-making while limiting the political stakes of the initial electoral exercise to something less than governmental authority. The model’s limitation is that constitutional assembly elections can themselves become polarized if political actors treat them as proxies for governmental control, which the Tunisian case partially illustrates.
- Spain’s transition is analyzed in Gunther et al. (1986), Linz & Stepan (1996), and Preston (2004). The Estado de las Autonomías process — in which the 1978 constitution created a framework for regional autonomy that was subsequently implemented through negotiated Statutes of Autonomy for individual regions — is analyzed in Agranoff (1996) and Requejo (2005). The model’s relevance to Iran lies primarily in its demonstration that ethnic and regional political demands can be accommodated within a post-authoritarian democratic framework through a sequential process of negotiation rather than requiring pre-transition resolution. The subsequent Catalan independence crisis has complicated the Spanish model’s status as an unambiguous success, but the autonomous communities system’s forty-year period of relative stability represents a significant achievement that Iran’s constitutional designers should study carefully.
- The CODESA process and its institutional innovations are analyzed in Friedman (1993) and Sparks (1995). The sunset clause mechanism — formally called the “sunset clauses” in the South African Interim Constitution — is analyzed in Klug (2000) and identified as one of the most creative institutional innovations in the transitional justice literature, providing a model for managing the transition from an incumbent security apparatus without either wholesale dissolution (which creates spoilers) or wholesale retention (which perpetuates the security apparatus’s political influence). The constitutional certification mechanism is analyzed in Roux (2009), who examines the Constitutional Court’s role in certifying the final constitution against the agreed constitutional principles.
- The Iraqi transition failure is analyzed comprehensively in Ricks (2006), Allawi (2007), and Dodge (2012). The de-Baathification decisions — made by the Coalition Provisional Authority’s Order Number 1 and Order Number 2, issued in May 2003 — are analyzed in detail in both sources, with convergent conclusions that the decisions’ breadth was the primary institutional cause of the subsequent insurgency. The specific quantitative dimension — approximately 400,000 army personnel and approximately 120,000 senior Ba’ath party members suddenly unemployed, many armed — provides the closest available comparator to the IRGC dissolution risk analyzed in this paper.
- Tunisia’s 2014 constitutional achievement and subsequent democratic deterioration are analyzed in Stepan & Linz (2013) for the success phase and in Gobe (2022) and Hamza (2022) for the deterioration. Saied’s 2021 constitutional coup — he suspended parliament, dismissed the prime minister, and assumed executive authority under emergency powers before subsequently holding a constitutional referendum that produced a new constitution concentrating authority in the presidency — is analyzed as a case of what Levitsky & Ziblatt (2018) call “democratic backsliding”: the erosion of democratic institutions by elected actors rather than by coup. The Tunisian case’s implications for Iran are specifically that constitutional design must include safeguards against executive overreach, and that economic performance during the democratic period matters enormously for democratic consolidation in ways that transition planners cannot afford to treat as secondary.
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