The Islamic Revolution Approach

The Islamic Revolution Approach

Institutional Independence and Accountability of the Judiciary in the Islamic Republic of Iran: A Comparative Analysis Before and After the 1989 Constitutional Revision

Document Type : Original Article

Authors
1 PhD Student in Public Law, Damghan Branch, Islamic Azad University, Iran
2 Department of Law, Damghan Branch, Islamic Azad University, Iran
Abstract
This article examines the institutional transformation of the Iranian judiciary by comparing its independence and accountability mechanisms before and after the 1989 constitutional revision. The pre-revision model was based on a collective leadership structure centered on the Supreme Judicial Council, while the post-revision arrangement introduced a centralized leadership under the Head of the Judiciary. The main research question explores whether managerial centralization has enhanced accountability and administrative efficiency without undermining judicial independence in adjudication. The study hypothesizes that centralized leadership improves decision-making speed, coordination, and responsibility attribution, but only becomes substantively accountable when accompanied by data-based transparency and regular public reporting. Using a qualitative institutional analysis and thematic coding of constitutional texts, legislative debates, and interpretive documents, the findings show that post-1989 reforms strengthened administrative coherence and responsibility attribution, yet persistent gaps in performance indicators—such as case duration, publication of judgments, and review rates—limit the realization of measurable accountability.
 
Introduction
The balance between judicial independence and institutional accountability represents one of the central challenges of constitutional governance. In judicial systems, independence safeguards the integrity of adjudication, while accountability ensures that judicial administration remains transparent, efficient, and responsive to public interests. In the Islamic Republic of Iran, this balance has been shaped by a significant institutional shift following the 1989 constitutional revision. The original 1979 Constitution established a collective leadership model for the judiciary through the Supreme Judicial Council, designed to prevent the concentration of power and to promote consultative decision-making. However, practical experience during the 1980s revealed structural limitations, particularly in coordination, responsibility attribution, and administrative efficiency. The 1989 revision replaced this model with a centralized leadership structure under a single Head of the Judiciary. This article investigates whether this transformation succeeded in reconciling independence and accountability more effectively than the previous arrangement.

 
Materials and Methods
The study adopts a qualitative institutional and historical-legal methodology. Primary sources include the text of the Iranian Constitution before and after the 1989 revision, official records of the Assembly of Experts’ debates in 1979 and the Constitutional Revision Council in 1989, and interpretive opinions issued by relevant constitutional bodies. Secondary sources consist of scholarly works on judicial governance, accountability, and Islamic legal theory. Data were analyzed through thematic coding—open, axial, and selective—to identify recurring patterns related to leadership structure, accountability mechanisms, administrative coordination, and safeguards of adjudicative independence. The analysis is guided by a conceptual distinction between “independence in adjudication” and “accountability in administration,” allowing for a nuanced assessment of institutional design.
 
Discussion
The findings indicate that the pre-1989 collective leadership model prioritized normative safeguards against personal concentration of power and symbolically reinforced judicial independence. However, this structure generated practical challenges. Decision-making processes were often slow due to multiple centers of authority, and responsibility for administrative outcomes was diffused. The absence of systematic performance indicators—such as standardized data on case backlog, duration of proceedings, and publication of judgments—further limited public and institutional accountability. As a result, accountability remained largely internal and procedural rather than measurable and socially visible.

The post-1989 centralized leadership model addressed many of these shortcomings by establishing a clear focal point for decision-making and responsibility attribution. Centralization enhanced administrative coordination, facilitated inter-branch communication, and enabled more coherent policy implementation in areas such as human resources, judicial training, and organizational restructuring. Importantly, constitutional texts and interpretive materials consistently emphasized that this concentration of administrative authority should not extend into the substance of judicial reasoning or adjudication. The Supreme Court’s role in ensuring uniformity of jurisprudence and legality of decisions was preserved as a key safeguard of judicial independence.
Nevertheless, the analysis also reveals persistent challenges. While centralization created the potential for measurable accountability, this potential has not been fully realized. The absence of institutionalized data transparency—regular publication of performance indicators, case-processing statistics, and accessible judgments—has limited the transformation of centralized authority into accountable governance. Without systematic reporting and standardized metrics, accountability risks becoming symbolic rather than substantive, and centralization may inadvertently heighten concerns about administrative overreach.
 
Conclusion
The comparative analysis demonstrates that neither the pre-1989 collective model nor the post-1989 centralized model offers a complete solution in isolation. The collective model effectively constrained personal power but suffered from fragmented accountability and administrative inefficiency. The centralized model improved coordination, speed, and responsibility attribution, yet requires robust transparency mechanisms to prevent personalistic governance and to protect adjudicative independence. The study concludes that an optimal institutional arrangement lies not in reverting to a collective structure nor in unqualified centralization, but in combining centralized administrative leadership with strong safeguards for judicial independence and data-driven accountability. Such a framework aligns with both constitutional principles and the normative concept of trusteeship (amanah) in Islamic governance, ensuring that judicial authority remains both independent in judgment and accountable in administration.

 
 
Keywords

Behn, Robert D. Rethinking Democratic Accountability. Washington, D.C.: Brookings Institution Press, 2001.
Moustafa, Tamir. The Struggle for Constitutional Power: Law, Politics, and Economic Development in Egypt. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007.
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