Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2022
More than half the population of Iran is under the age of seventeen, but despite these more than 30 million children and adolescents, social scientists know little about their experiences, culture, or history.
This ignorance is a reflection of what social scientists deem important. The dismissive attitude toward research with children is similar to earlier attitudes toward research with women: at best women were quantified and described. Most social scientists were male, seeing women from a male point of view. Out of the innocent arrogance that a male-dominated science breeds in its practitioners, women's own culture was largely ignored; “culture” was male culture. This changed only when women social scientists started to look at women through their own eyes.
1 Various stages of this research kindly were supported by the Wenner Gren Foundation for Anthropological Research, the Social Science Research Council, the National Endowment for the Humanities, and Western Michigan University. My work with children resulted in my book, Children of Deh Koh: Young Life in an Iranian Village (Syracuse, NY, 1997)Google Scholar.
2 According to the logic of patrilineal descent and to Shari'a law, children belong to their father's group. Recently, this law has been challenged successfully in cases of divorce or widowhood, but unsuccessfully so if a mother remarries.