Protests, Power, and the Future of Freedom
In recent months, millions of Iranians have taken to the streets in one of the most significant waves of protests since the 1979 revolution. Sparked by economic collapse but fueled by deeper political frustration, these nationwide demonstrations reveal a regime facing unprecedented public rejection. From Tehran’s bazaars to university campuses across the country, everyday Iranians are openly challenging official propaganda, rejecting the regime’s foreign adventurism, and demanding a future rooted in opportunity, accountability, and dignity.
Although the government continues to respond with repression, the freedom movement inside Iran is not fading. It is evolving. Economic strain, generational shifts, and mounting public dissent have exposed deep fractures within the Islamic Republic. The stakes for Iran’s political future — and for the broader Middle East — have rarely been more consequential.
But history offers a sobering lesson: the fall of one authoritarian regime does not automatically produce a free society.
If change comes to Iran — suddenly or gradually — will the institutions, norms, and public understanding needed to sustain liberty be prepared? What is the public mood beneath the headlines? And what bottom-up forces could move Iran from theocratic-socialist tyranny toward durable freedom?
To explore what this pivotal moment means, Atlas Network’s Executive Vice President, Dr. Tom G. Palmer, will be joined by Mohamad Machine-Chian — an Iranian public policy scholar, senior journalist at Iran International based in Washington, D.C., and a Reynolds Fellow at Atlas Network. A longtime analyst of Iran’s political economy and civil society, Machine-Chian brings both academic expertise and frontline journalistic insight into the forces reshaping the country today. His work reflects ongoing engagement with reform-minded voices inside and outside Iran who are laying the intellectual and institutional groundwork necessary for lasting political change.
In this special edition of Freedom Worldwide, we will examine:
- What the recent nationwide protests reveal about the strength and stability of Iran’s ruling regime
- The state of the freedom movement beneath the surface
- What recent events mean for the broader Middle East
- What foundations must be in place to ensure that future change leads to lasting freedom
We hope you will join us Sunday March 8, 2026 at 1pm ET. Register here to participate in the conversation.