International Iranian Economic Association

International Iranian Economic Association
Abbreviation IIEA
Formation 2010 (2010)
Type Research and Academics
Legal status U.S. Public charity
under 501(c)(3)
Headquarters London, UK
Website iraneconomics.org

The International Iranian Economic Association (IIEA) is a private, non-profit, and non-political organization of scholars interested in the study of economic issues concerning Iran, in the broadest sense of the term.[1]

The objectives of the IIEA are:[2]

  1. Promotion of high standard economic scholarship and research on Iran’s economy
  2. Promotion of cooperation among persons and organizations committed to the objectives of IIEA
  3. Facilitation of communication among scholars through its webpage, meetings and publications
  4. Promotion of better understanding of Iran’s economic policy challenges and opportunities.

Organizing Committee

The Organizing Committee of the "International Iranian Economic Association" (IIEA) consists of:

NameTitleAffiliation
Hassan HakimianDirector, London Middle East Institute, and Reader in EconomicsSOAS, University of London
Massoud KarshenasProfessor of EconomicsSOAS, University of London
Hashem PesaranProfessor of EconomicsUniversity of Cambridge and USC
Hadi Salehi EsfahaniProfessor of EconomicsUniversity of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Djavad Salehi-IsfahaniProfessor of EconomicsVirginia Tech

Founding Members

Founding members of the IIEA are:

NameTitleAffiliation
Parvin AlizadehPrincipal Lecturer in EconomicsLondon Metropolitan University
Jahangir AmuzegarInternational Economic Consultant
Mehdi AsaliEnergy EconomistOPEC Secretariat, Vienna and International Institute for Energy Studies (IIES), Tehran
Mohsen Bahmani-OskooeeWilmeth Professor and UWM Distinguished Professor in EconomicsUniversity of Wisconsin–Milwaukee
Sohrab BehdadProfessor and John E. Harris Chair in EconomicsDenison University
Gholamali FarjadiLabour EconomistManaging Director, Taban Kherad Consulting, Tehran
Hossein FarzinProfessor of EconomicsUniversity of California-Davis
Fereidun FesharakiChairman and CEOFACTS Global Energy
Firouz GahvariLeiby Hall Endowed Chair and Professor of EconomicsUniversity of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Nader HabibiHenry J. Leir Professor of the Economics of the Middle EastBrandeis University
Hassan HakimianDirector, London Middle East Institute, and Reader in EconomicsSOAS, University of London
Ahmad Reza Jalali NainiChairman, Department of EconomicsInstitute for Research in Planning & Management, Tehran
Massoud KarshenasProfessor of EconomicsSOAS, University of London
Esfandiar MaasoumiArts & Sciences Distinguished Professor of EconomicsEmory University
Fatemeh MoghadamProfessor of EconomicsHofstra University
Hamid MohtadiProfessor of EconomicsUniversity of Wisconsin–Milwaukee
Farhad NomaniProfessor of EconomicsAmerican University of Paris
Vahid NowshirvaniEmeritus Professor of EconomicsColumbia University
Jamshid PazhooyanProfessor of EconomicsAllameh Tabatabai University
Hashem PesaranProfessor of EconomicsUniversity of Cambridge and USC
Hadi Salehi EsfahaniProfessor of EconomicsUniversity of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Djavad Salehi-IsfahaniProfessor of EconomicsVirginia Tech
Hossein SamieiMission Chief for PortugalInternational Monetary Fund
Gholam Reza SoltaniProfessor of EconomicsDepartment of Agricultural Economics, Shiraz University
Mohammad TabibianEmeritus Professor of EconomicsEmeritus Professor, Former Director of The School of Banking, Tehran

Controversy

According to PressTV, IIEA is "a trap for Iranian economists [...] and used as a venue to attract Iranian students, seeking to transfer the center of Iran’s economic studies from inside to outside of the country by deceiving and cooperating with some domestic economic figures." [3] Yet, Iran's government, the IMF or WEF collaborate openly.[4][5][6]

See also

References

  1. "Website". IIEA. Retrieved 1 August 2011.
  2. Parvin, Alizadeh; Hakimian, Hassan (December 2013). Iran and the Global Economy: Petro Populism, Islam and Economic Sanctions. London, U.K.: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-315-86720-5.
  3. "UK security services set trap for Iranian economists". PressTV. May 11, 2014. Archived from the original on September 5, 2014. Retrieved June 23, 2014.
  4. IMF (February 13, 2014). "Statement at the Conclusion of the 2014 Article IV Consultation Mission to Islamic Republic of Iran" (PDF). Central Bank of Iran. Retrieved June 23, 2014.
  5. IMF Staff Report (April 2014). "Islamic Republic of Iran" (PDF). International Monetary Fund. Retrieved June 23, 2014.
  6. The Global Competitiveness Report (2014–2015). World Economic Forum, August 2014. Retrieved September 5, 2014.


This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.