The 2024 Iranian Hijab and Chastity Law is a new frontier in state control and social surveillance mechanisms, meriting close examination against the framework of Foucaults theoretical framework regarding power, discipline, and resistance. The paper focuses on how this law leverages complex technological infrastructure, economic penalties, and institutional enforcement to build an integrated regime of bodily policing and social conformity. Through the perspective of Foucauldian concepts such as the Panopticon, biopower, and governmentality, the paper shows how digital surveillance technologies, AI, and automated enforcement systems transform an old religious authority into a modern control apparatus. The study illustrates that although the law brings about a level of surveillance and regulation never seen before, at the same time, it reveals some critical hidden vulnerabilities of the state. The paper argues that the same intensity of mechanisms of control foments new forms of resistance, from individual acts of defiance to concerted digital activism. Based on elaborate legal analysis and expert opinions, this study concludes that the effort of the law to achieve a form of total control turns out paradoxically to disclose its limitations, as women devise sophisticated strategies of resistance within the systems engineered to constrain them. This paper contributes to understanding how new surveillance technologies remake older power relations and how resistance emerges within a seemingly totalizing control system.
Yeganeh Nazem (Thu,) studied this question.
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