Dashboard: Protests in Iran
Dashboard: Protests in Iran
The wave of protests sweeping Iran over the past two weeks presents the Iranian regime with its most significant challenge in recent years. The scale and severity of the protests particularly in recent days cast doubt on the regime’s ability to contain them as it has in the past. This is especially so in light of the depth of the economic crisis, the worsening hardships facing the population, the erosion of public trust in the Islamic Republic, and the explicit threat by the president of the United States to employ military force in the event of widespread and lethal violent repression of the protests.
At this stage, it is too early to assess whether the dramatic developments in Iran pose an immediate threat to the regime’s survival. Nevertheless, they may constitute a turning point in the balance of power between those seeking revolutionary change in Iran and supporters of the regime who are determined to preserve it at any cost, or at the very least to pave the way for a significant political shift in Iran one whose characteristics and implications remain difficult to assess.
This regularly updated product of the Data Analytics Center at INSS presents an overview of the current wave of protest. It is intended to provide a foundation for continued, ongoing monitoring of the unfolding events in Iran, which have the potential to affect the stability of the regime in Tehran.
The wave of protests sweeping Iran over the past two weeks presents the Iranian regime with its most significant challenge in recent years. The scale and severity of the protests particularly in recent days cast doubt on the regime’s ability to contain them as it has in the past. This is especially so in light of the depth of the economic crisis, the worsening hardships facing the population, the erosion of public trust in the Islamic Republic, and the explicit threat by the president of the United States to employ military force in the event of widespread and lethal violent repression of the protests.
At this stage, it is too early to assess whether the dramatic developments in Iran pose an immediate threat to the regime’s survival. Nevertheless, they may constitute a turning point in the balance of power between those seeking revolutionary change in Iran and supporters of the regime who are determined to preserve it at any cost, or at the very least to pave the way for a significant political shift in Iran one whose characteristics and implications remain difficult to assess.
This regularly updated product of the Data Analytics Center at INSS presents an overview of the current wave of protest. It is intended to provide a foundation for continued, ongoing monitoring of the unfolding events in Iran, which have the potential to affect the stability of the regime in Tehran.
Photo: REUTERS (modified by INSS)
Data processing, analysis and dashboard development: Nitsan Prayzler | Data Collection: Avihu Marom | Advisory Team: Raz Zimmt and Mora Deitch
Dashboard
Methodological Note
Data collection relies primarily on media reporting from Iran. As a result, internet disruptions significantly affect both the scope and quality of the data.
Methodology
We track protest-related activity in Iran by collecting daily reporting from a fixed set of public sources, alongside any uploaded raw files. We break reporting into individual, location-specific incidents (one row per distinct event), include both nonviolent activity (e.g., demonstrations, chanting/night chanting, strikes, bazaar/shop closures) and state actions (e.g., arrests, raids, use of force), and remove only clear duplicates. Each entry is written in neutral language, tied to a specific place and date, and includes a standardized source citation. The dataset captures protests in multiple forms (street demonstrations, gatherings, night activity, student actions, funerals with protest content, road blocking, and protest-related property damage), as well as incidents involving clashes or force when reported. Importantly, it includes protest micro-events even when no security-force presence or intervention is mentioned, not only clashes or violence.
Sources used (project source list):
- Iran International
- ManotoTV
- Tavaana
- Radio Zamaneh
- Kurdpa / Kurdpa Agency
- Hengaw
- Vahid Online
- ILIA HASHEMI
- HRANA
- Iran Human Rights (IHRNGO)
- Abdorrahman Boroumand Center
- Reuters
- Associated Press (AP)
- Al Jazeera
- The Guardian
- IranWire
- NetBlocks
- Institute for the Study of War (ISW)
- Critical Threats Project (CTP)