Ramin Jahanbegloo

Ramin Jahanbegloo

Philosopher; Professor and Research Fellow, Centre for Ethics, University of Toronto.
Dr. Jahanbegloo is a well-known Iranian-Canadian philosopher. He received his BA and MA in philosophy, history and political science and later his Ph.D in philosophy from the Sorbonne University, France. In 1993, he taught at the Academy of Philosophy in Tehran. He has been a researcher at the French Institute for Iranian Studies and a fellow at the Center for Middle Eastern Studies at Harvard University. He taught in the Department of Political Science at the University of Toronto from 1997-2001. He later served as the head of the Department of Contemporary Studies of the Cultural Research Centre in Tehran and, in 2006-2007, was Rajni Kothari Professor of Democracy at the Centre for the Study of Developing Societies in New Delhi, India. In April 2006 he was arrested in Tehran Airport and charged with preparing a velvet revolution in Iran. He was placed in solitary confinement for four months and released on bail. He is presently a Professor of political science and a Research Fellow in the Centre for Ethics at University of Toronto and a board member of PEN Canada. Among his twenty books in English, French and Persian are *Conversations with Isaiah Berlin* (Peter Halban, 1992), *Gandhi: Aux Sources de la Nonviolence* (Felin, 1999), *Penser la Nonviolence* (UNESCO, 2000), *Iran: Between Tradition and Modernity* (Lexington Books, 2004) *India Revisited: Conversations on Contemporary India* (Oxford University Press, 2007), *The Clash of Intolerances* (Har-Anand, 2007); and very recently *The Spirit of India* (Penguin, 2008), and *Beyond Violence* (Har-Anand, 2008).
Latest contributions by Ramin Jahanbegloo

What Egypt Means for Iran

With Egypt demanding democracy, others in the Middle East, including Iran, will follow suit.

Will Mubarak Be the Next Domino to Fall?

The toppling of the governments in Tunisia and Egypt could bring a wave of revolution across the Arab world.

Nuclear War

An Iranian dissident and political activist sits down with The Mark to talk about the probability of the world erupting into a nuclear war.

Everyone’s a Loser in the Mideast Blame Game

Israel and the Palestinian territories will need to learn to share responsibility for the conflict before they can find a solution.

The Science of Peace

Our tendency to accept violence and destruction as a necessary consequence of science is blind and must be challenged.