The opportunities and complexities of studying Iran in 21st century America

December 11, 2025

Minoo Moallem was getting her master’s degree at Tehran University when the Iranian revolution swept the country. At first, she enjoyed new civil liberties, but as those were curtailed, Moallem left to pursue her Ph.D. abroad.

Moallem is now a professor of gender and women’s studies and the new faculty director for the UC Berkeley Initiative for Iranian Studies. 

“UC Berkeley is a wonderful institution that is, in my view, an ideal place to foster rigorous teaching and research,” said Moallem. “There is a rich tradition of Iranian poetry, literature, film, art, and crafts that transcends national boundaries and deserves well-informed scholarly attention. This is fertile ground to do academic work, design courses, and hire more faculty.”

Philanthropists have been investing in Iranian studies programs at universities for decades, part of an effort to increase recognition of the region’s cultural heritage. The Persian plateau was integral to Silk Road trade routes, connecting different religions and peoples for centuries. In the modern era, Iran has fostered a rich cinematic tradition and played a central role in many world events.

Iranian studies can be difficult to define. For one, Iran is culturally diverse, and some members of the Iranian diaspora refer to themselves by their ethnicity to avoid identifying with the Iranian government or being subjected to national stereotypes. Furthermore, many of the subfields within Iranian studies expand beyond borders. The ancient Achaemenid Empire, for example, spread from the Balkans to North Africa to the Indus River, making it the largest empire of its time.

Adam Benkato is a scholar of Old and Middle Iranian languages spoken over a thousand years ago. His main focus is Sogdian, which was used throughout much of Central Asia, and Middle Persian, the predecessor to modern Persian. Benkato is currently leading an international project to photograph and translate Middle Persian documents and make them available online.

An old photo of a woman smiling in front of a bookshelf; A headshot of a women wearing large glasses
MINOO MOALLEM AT TEHRAN UNIVERSITY (LEFT) AND AS A UC BERKELEY PROFESSOR (RIGHT)
There is a rich tradition of Iranian poetry, literature, film, art, and crafts that transcends national boundaries and deserves well-informed scholarly attention.
Minoo Moallem

“Area studies have terms where people know what you mean, but there isn’t a clear definition that everyone agrees on,” said Benkato. “Iranian studies is huge. It includes the politics of the modern nation-state of Iran, classical Islam, the Iranic group of languages, and ancient history.”

Geopolitical tensions risk scholarly collaboration

Typically, the most robust area studies programs reside at universities in their home regions. Though Iran has a relatively well-educated population, Moallem noted that state censorship limits academic and artistic freedom. That makes it especially important for UC Berkeley, the world’s top public university, to provide space for critical and independent scholarship.

There are issues in the United States as well. Moallem noted that influential figures often represent Iran and Iranians based on their own political agendas.

“Iranians are sometimes subjected to stereotypes of either the model minority or the backwards, religious fanatic,” lamented Moallem. “In that sense, it's really important to have a program that is thoughtful about the history, culture, and displacement of Iranians.”

Moallem warned that the West’s “desire to liberate Iranian women” undermines domestic reformers. Even supportive-sounding organizations can deprive Iranians of their own agency. 

“There has been a consistent movement by women in Iran to change the law and create more social justice,” said Moallem. “They are so impressive, yet we are constantly constructing Iranian women as imprisoned, never considering their achievements. It has created this us/them dynamic. We need to host creative and academic spaces where these voices can come together and engage with each other.”

The U.S. and Iran have had a tense relationship for decades, and that dynamic is only intensifying. Scholars are often caught in the middle. In June, an executive order placed strict restrictions on who is allowed to travel to the U.S. from Iran, including those on student visas. Amid a nationwide decline in international college students, Iranian students experienced the most significant drop, with 86 percent fewer studying in America than in 2024.

An overhead shot of three people looking down at old documents with writing
An old document with Middle Persian writing; a bearded man with shoulder-length hair smiles by a bookshelf
ADAM BENKATO (BOTTOM-RIGHT) SUPERVISES A TEAM OF POSTDOCTORAL AND UNDERGRADUATE STUDENTS PHOTOGRAPHING MIDDLE PERSIAN DOCUMENTS AT THE CENTER FOR THE TEBTUNIS PAPYRI (PHOTOS: JEN SISKA)
The texts preserved in ancient Iranian languages are a window into societies that are not well-documented.
Adam Benkato

“It's pretty much impossible to bring Iranian students here, and that's a real shame,” said Benkato. “In my field, there are several Iranian institutions where they can learn ancient languages, so they often come with pretty good training. Now, we can’t offer them admission, we can’t guarantee they will get a visa, and we can't necessarily pay them enough. So, we're missing out on a lot of potential from very bright students.”

Benkato noted the difficulty in simply communicating with Iranian colleagues. He can’t travel to Iran to meet other specialists or get grants for projects that involve them. He noted that even Iranian researchers based in Europe are hesitant to come to the United States.

“It slows things down,” said Benkato. “We should have partnerships with relevant Iranian institutions, and we can't. It affects the future of the field and the kind of scholarship that can get done.”

Resourcing the field

UC Berkeley’s Iranian studies program began in 1961, when the campus hired Walter Henning, the most prominent scholar of ancient Iran at the time. UC Berkeley established a strong legacy in the field with additional hires, but after a wave of retirements in the early 2000s, it appeared that the faculty wouldn’t be replaced. Then, in 2016, Iranian-American philanthropist Bita Daryabari endowed a new faculty chair (currently held by Benkato), rejuvenating the program. The most recent hire was the poet Solmaz Sharif in 2023.

Though Benkato is clearly fascinated by language, the primary motivation for his research is to gain a greater understanding of regions’ historical trajectories.

“The texts preserved in ancient Iranian languages are a window into societies that are not well-documented,” said Benkato. “These documents teach us how societies and religious movements flourished and declined. They give us a real picture of how everyday people got their food, exchanged rations, and made small-scale transactions. It really fleshes out our picture of the ancient world.”

Many historical documents from ancient Iranian history have been lost to time and humidity. UC Berkeley holds the largest accessible collection of Middle Persian documents in the world — around 300 documents, which represent approximately 20 percent of all known items from that period.