The Islamic Revolution Approach

The Islamic Revolution Approach

From Institutional Multiplicity to Functional Dysfunction: An Analysis of the Supervisory System in the Islamic Republic of Iran

Document Type : Original Article

Authors
1 Department of low, Si.C., Islamic Azad University, Sirjan, Iran
2 Department of low, Si.C., Islamic Azad University, Sirjan, Iran(Corresponding Author).
Abstract
The supervisory system of the Islamic Republic of Iran is, in terms of legal and institutional design, one of the most extensive and multi-layered models of oversight among contemporary public law systems. Nevertheless, persistent implementation challenges raise the question of how institutional multiplicity, despite its normative richness, has resulted in reduced supervisory effectiveness and weakened accountability. This study hypothesizes that the functional dysfunction of oversight does not stem from the absence of laws or supervisory bodies, but rather from overlapping jurisdictions, the lack of coordination mechanisms, and weak enforceable guarantees. The research aims to explain the relationship between the institutional design of supervision and its functional outcomes through a structural analysis. Using a qualitative approach, the study employs document analysis of constitutional provisions, ordinary laws governing supervisory institutions, bylaws, and official legal documents. Data are analyzed through conceptual coding. The findings reveal a significant gap between the normative framework of supervision and its institutional performance, indicating that oversight, despite its breadth, has largely become a low-impact and predominantly report-oriented practice.

Introduction
Oversight constitutes a foundational element of public law and modern governance, serving as a primary mechanism for controlling public power, ensuring accountability, and safeguarding citizens’ rights. In contemporary political systems, supervision is no longer understood merely as an administrative or procedural tool, but as an integral component of governance architecture that regulates the relationship between state institutions and society. The effectiveness of oversight, therefore, depends not only on its normative articulation in legal texts, but also on its institutional design and practical implementation.
The legal system of the Islamic Republic of Iran places considerable emphasis on supervision. The Constitution explicitly provides for multiple forms of oversight, including parliamentary supervision, financial control, judicial review, administrative inspection, and mechanisms for public complaints. Over time, this constitutional framework has been supplemented by numerous laws and institutions, such as the Parliament’s supervisory tools, the Supreme Audit Court, the General Inspection Organization, and the Administrative Justice Court. At the normative level, this structure suggests a strong commitment to controlling power and preventing abuse.
Despite this extensive framework, recurring concerns regarding inefficiency, limited impact, and weak accountability persist. This paradox raises a central question: how has a system characterized by institutional richness and legal density produced outcomes that are often perceived as ineffective? Addressing this question requires moving beyond descriptive accounts of supervisory institutions and toward a structural analysis of their interaction and functional consequences.
Materials and Methods
This study adopts a qualitative research design grounded in document analysis. The primary data consist of constitutional provisions, ordinary legislation governing supervisory bodies, parliamentary bylaws, and official legal documents related to oversight mechanisms. These materials are treated not merely as legal texts, but as institutional data reflecting underlying assumptions about power, control, and accountability.
The analytical process follows a conceptual coding strategy. First, relevant legal provisions were systematically identified and categorized according to their supervisory function, such as authority to investigate, obligation to report, enforcement capacity, and mechanisms of follow-up. Second, these codes were grouped into broader analytical categories reflecting patterns of institutional interaction, including jurisdictional overlap, fragmentation of responsibility, and gaps between reporting and enforcement. Finally, these categories were synthesized to identify structural features contributing to functional dysfunction.
This approach allows for the identification of inconsistencies and disconnections between the normative design of oversight and its institutional performance, without relying on empirical case studies or quantitative indicators.

Discussion
The analysis reveals that the supervisory system in Iran is characterized by extensive institutional multiplicity without effective coordination. Multiple bodies are often granted similar or overlapping supervisory mandates, particularly in areas such as financial oversight, administrative legality, and control of executive actions. While such overlap is normatively intended to strengthen accountability, in practice it frequently results in dispersed responsibility and ambiguous authority.
A key finding is the prevalence of what can be termed “report-oriented supervision.” Many supervisory institutions are legally empowered to investigate and report violations, yet lack clear mechanisms to ensure that their findings lead to binding corrective action. As a result, reports may circulate among institutions without producing substantive institutional reform or enforcement. This weak linkage between detection and correction significantly undermines the functional effectiveness of oversight.
Moreover, the absence of a central coordination mechanism exacerbates these problems. Supervisory bodies operate largely within their own institutional logic, with limited obligation to integrate their findings or prioritize systemic reform. This fragmentation creates conditions under which supervision becomes procedurally active but substantively limited, generating what may be described as functional dysfunction rather than institutional failure.
Importantly, the findings suggest that the core problem lies not in legal deficiency, but in institutional design. The supervisory system is normatively robust but structurally misaligned, leading to a persistent gap between constitutional ideals and practical outcomes.

Conclusion
This study demonstrates that the challenges facing the supervisory system of the Islamic Republic of Iran cannot be adequately explained by the absence of laws or oversight institutions. Instead, they stem from a structural mismatch between institutional multiplicity and functional coherence. The lack of coordination, overlapping mandates, and weak enforcement mechanisms collectively contribute to a form of functional dysfunction that diminishes the impact of supervision.
By employing qualitative document analysis and conceptual coding, this research provides a structural understanding of oversight that moves beyond descriptive institutional analysis. The findings underscore the need for rethinking supervisory design, with particular attention to coordination, enforceability, and the transformation of reports into effective institutional outcomes.
Keywords

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