Roksana Bahramitash


Roksana Bahramitash is a sociologist of an Iranian background whose work focuses on women, employment and the informal economy in the Middle East and North Africa, as well as gender segregation in Islam, and Microeconomics. In post-revolution Iran, Bahramitash was working on improving peasant women's literacy and access to economic development resources.

Early Life

She was placed second in nationwide Iranian University entrance exams, and attended Universities in Iran where she earned both her Bachelor's and Master's degrees in Sociology. Bahramitash later came to Canada to complete her Ph.D. in Sociology from McGill University in Montreal, Quebec.

Personal Life and Post-Doctoral work

Bahramitash eventually settled in Montreal, Canada as a citizen, where she has done post-doctoral work at the Simone de Beauvoir Institute, Concordia University in Montreal and Simon Fraser University.

Career

Bahramitash has also held lecturing and research positions at McGill and Concordia Universities, and the University of Montreal. She is the producer of a documentary film entitled Beyond the Bourqa, a documentary film made about women's changing lives during the War in Afghanistan. A follow up film to Beyond the Bourqa was intended, however filming came to an abrupt end when a suicide bomb was detonated at a U.N. compound very near to where Bahramitash was staying and herself and her crew were forced to leave Afghanistan because of the heightened level of danger.
Bahramitash is the winner of the Aileen D. Ross award for her focus on women and poverty in the Middle East. Her post-doctoral research was selected by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council as one of the three most distinguished research projects in Canada and was submitted to the Canadian Parliament Library. In 2006 she won a three-year research grant from the SSHRC for a project on Globalization, Islam and Women. Besides university teaching and research, Bahramitash has worked as a researcher and/or consultant with several international development agencies including the Canadian International Development Agency.
Her first book was Liberation from Liberalization: Gender and Globalization in Southeast Asia. This book has been translated into Persian and published by SAMT as a University textbook. Her recent books are entitled Veiled Employment: Islamism and the Political Economy of Women's Employment in Iran by Syracuse University Press 2011, and Gender in Contemporary Iran: Pushing the Boundaries by Routledge and which was co-edited with Eric Hooglund, 2011. She Bahramitash most recently served as a Director of Research at the University of Montreal and worked with the Chair of Islam, Pluralism and Globalization.

Selected publications

Books

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