Ahmad Jalali (Persian: احمد جلالی, born 1949 in Shahroud) is an Iranian scholar and philosopher.
He authored a dozen articles in social, cultural, historical, philosophical, political and international fields.[1] Jalali was instrumental in registering five Iranian sites as World Heritage Site in UNESCO.[2]
Education
editMechanical Engineering, Shiraz University (BA),
Philosophy, Tehran University (MA),
Political Philosophy, University of Oxford (PhD).[citation needed]
Positions
edit- Teaching Fellow, University of Manchester, Department of Middle Eastern Studies, Manchester, United Kingdom (1991–92)
- Fellow, Oriental Studies and Academic Member, Department of Persian Studies, Oriental Institute, University of Oxford, United Kingdom (1992–97).
- Ambassador and Permanent Delegate of Iran to UNESCO (1997–2006)
- Chairperson, Programme Commission I, 29th Session of the General Conference (1997)
- Chairperson, Roundtable on Youth, 29th Session of the General Conference (1997)
- Representative of Iran to the Executive Board of UNESCO (1999–2001)
- Chairperson, Fourth Regional Group, Asia and the Pacific, UNESCO (1999)
- Co-organizer and contributor to many UNESCO-sponsored conferences focusing on Dialogue between Islamic and European Civilizations
- Member, Council of United Nations University (UNU) (2001–07)
- President of the 31st General Conference of UNESCO (2001–03) [3]
- President of the World Heritage Convention General Assembly of UNESCO (2003–04)
- Head of the Iranian Parliament Library, Museum and Documentation Center and Cultural Consultant of the Iranian Parliament Speaker (2007–08)
- Ambassador and Permanent Delegate of Iran to UNESCO (2013–21)
Publications/Writings
edit- Jalali, Ahmad (2021). "Aspects of ʿAllāmah Majlisī's Impacts on the Research Culture of Shi'ites and Persian Speakers". Journal of Shi'a Islamic Studies. 11 (3): 137–178. ISSN 2051-557X. Retrieved 2022-11-05.
- Jalali, Ahmad (2003). "Dialogue and UNESCO's mission: an epistemic approach". Dialogue and universalism. 13 (6): 13. Retrieved 2022-11-05.
Notes
edit- ^ "H.E. Dr. Ahmad Jalali". Archived from the original on 2006-12-30. Retrieved 2007-01-19.
- ^ Irna Archived 2007-09-30 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Address by Mr Ahmad Jalali, Ambassador, Permanent Delegate of the Islamic Republic of Iran to UNESCO, on the occasion of his election as President of the General Conference at its 31st session; Paris, 15 October 2001". UNESCO.