MERIP Roundtable: Iran’s 2025‑26 Protests, Repression, and Global Impact

In this installment of the MERIP Roundtable podcast, we ​discuss the latest wave ‍of protests in ⁣Iran. The protests‌ began on December 28, 2025, ⁤as merchants and bazaar workers reacted negatively to new budgetary measures announced by President Masoud Pezeshkian. The‍ protests snowballed in the​ first week of January, reaching a peak on and shortly after‌ January 8, after‍ which the government ⁢instituted an internet blackout. The⁤ protests have been widespread and increasingly cross-sectoral. They’ve also⁤ been met with harsh ‌repression ‍by the IRGC and its affiliates, with reports of clashes and ​summary ⁤executions resulting ‌in thousands of casualties. the conversation covers the⁢ protests, how ⁣they compare ⁢and contrast with prior waves of unrest and how regional and⁤ global politics are influencing both the regime and its‌ opposition. Joining MERIP’s executive director, James Ryan, are​ Kaveh Ehsani, a‌ member of MERIP’s board of directors and a professor of international studies at DePaul University; Maziyar Ghiabi, a member of MERIP’s editorial committee and an ⁢associate professor of Social Sciences and Director of the ⁣Centre for Persian ‍and Iranian Studies at the Institute for Arab and Islamic Studies at the University of Exeter; and Asma Abdi, an ESRC Postdoctoral Fellow, also ⁤at Exeter’s Institute for Arab and Islamic Studies.

This conversation was ‍recorded on January 21, 2026.



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