Document Type : Research Paper

Author

Assistant Professor, Department of Public Law, Semnan University, Semnan, Iran

Abstract

Introduction

Article 4 of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran has determined the jurists of the Guardian Council as the competent authority to exercise religious supervision over the application of the general principles of the Constitution. According to this article, "All civil, criminal, financial, economic, administrative, cultural, military, political, and other laws and regulations must be based on Islamic standards. This article governs [deciding] the generality or specificness of all articles of the Constitution as well as other laws and regulations, and it is up to the jurists of the Guardian Council to determine this matter."
In recent years, the jurists of the Guardian Council, in the exercise of their competence, have accordingly limited or allocated some of the articles of the Constitution by providing "direct and explicit Sharia interpretations" or "indirect and implicit Sharia interpretations".
Assuming the competence of the Guardian Council jurists to supervise the implementation of the Constitution, one of the issues that must be discussed and investigated is the limits of the Guardian Council jurists’ power in exercising this competence.
Research Question(s)
To what extent can the jurists of the Guardian Council restrict the articles of the Constitution?

Literature Review

This research topic has had no precedent thus discussing this matter is completely novel and new.

Methodology

This study tried to ask the question above by identifying the examples of this authority and analyzing them with a descriptive-analytical method.

Result

The research proved that, although the assumption of the absolute and unlimited competence of the Guardian Council's jurists to exercise Sharia supervision over the articles of the Constitution can be useful and effective in taking advantage of purposive interpretations that also consider the evolution of the legal system, this view can be criticized and unacceptable for various reasons.
One error in this view is that complete discretion might lead to a violation of the intention of the writers of the constitution; because the majority of the members of the committee in charge of the final review of the constitution were among the faqihs and were Islamic scholars, they paid attention to Sharia when drafting the articles of the Constitution. On the other hand, before the referendum was held and the people voted on it, the draft of the constitution was approved by Imam Khomeini (RA) as a faqih; therefore, the claim that the writers of the Constitution have approved matters that may be in violation of the Sharia rules and Imam Khomeini (RA) also approved them and put them to referendum is not acceptable.
On the other hand, the assumption of such absolute authority for the jurists of the Guardian Council is contrary to the necessity of maintaining stability and coherence in the Constitution as a national covenant. Prevalence of this view may cause instability in the coherence of Iran's Constitution. Also, this view will make it impossible to use the capacity to revise the Constitution, which is already set out in Article 177 of the Constitution.
Therefore, to protect the status of the Constitution in Iran’s political system, it is necessary to assume the legitimacy of the content of the Constitution, and presume that the competence of the jurists of the Guardian Council interpret the Constitution is limited to the cases which the drafters of the Constitution have overlooked or neglected in the process of approving that article. Therefore, the jurists of the Guardian Council cannot declare the specific rules of the constitution as contrary to Sharia or to limit the general articles of the Constitution.

Conclusion

Based on the mentioned rule, if there is a conflict between the Islamic approach of the drafters of the constitution and the approach of the jurists of the Guardian Council, the approach considered by the drafters of the constitution should be adhered to. Also, Sharia supervision cannot in any case modify the structure or the mechanisms defined in the constitution or introduce a new structure in contrast with the existing structure.

Keywords

Main Subjects

In Persian
Books
- Annotated Report of the Parliament's Final Review of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran, Volume 1 (Tehran: The General Department of Cultural Affairs and Public Relations of the Islamic Council, 1985).
- Ansari, Morteza bin Mohammad Amin, Rasaila Faqih (Qom: Majmaal al-Fikr al-Islami, 1993).
- Anvari, Hassan, The Great Dictionary of Sokhan, Second Edition, Fifth and Seventh Volumes (Tehran: Sokhan Publications, 2012).
- Al-Bahrani, Muhammad Sanqour Ali, Al-Mujam al-Osuli, First Volume, Second Edition )Unknown: Manshurat Naqsh, 2005).
- Al-Boroojerdi, Al-Sayed Hossein, Commentaries on the Principles of Fiqh, First Volume (Unknown: Al-Nashr al-Islami Institute).
- Jafari Langeroudi & Mohammad Jaafar, Legal Terminology, 20th Edition (Tehran: Ganj Danesh Publications, 2017).
- Khansari, Mohammad, Dictionary of Logical Terms, Second Edition, First Volume (Tehran: Research Institute of Human Sciences and Cultural Studies, 1997).
- Ramadan Hasan, Khaled, The Encyclopedia of Principles of Jurisprudence (Unknown, No Data).
- Fazel Lankarani, Muhammad, Principles of Shia jurisprudence, Volume 6 (Qom: Fiqh Center of Aemmeh Athar, Peace be Upon Him, 2002).
- Kaabi, Abbas, Analysis of the Foundations of the System of the Islamic Republic of Iran Based on the Principles of the Constitution, Volume 1 (Tehran: Guardian Council Research Institute Publications, 2014).
- Gorji Azandariani, Ali Akbar, In the Struggle for Fundamental Rights, Second Edition (Tehran: Jangal Publications, 2008).
- Center for Islamic Information and Resources, Dictionary of Principles of Jurisprudence, Volume 1 (Qom: Research Institute of Islamic Culture and Science, 2015).
- Center for Islamic Information and Documents, Dictionary of Principles of Jurisprudence (Qom: Research Institute of Islamic Sciences and Culture, 2009).
- Moin, Mohammad, Farsi Dictionary, Twenty-sixth Edition (Tehran: Amirkabir Publications, 2017).
- Velai, Isa, Annotative Dictionary of Principles, Volume I, Sixth Edition (Tehran: Ney Publishing, 2017).
- Al-Hashemi Al-Shahroodi, Al-Sayed Mahmoud, Tahrir al-osul, Volume 1.
- Yazdi, Mohammad, Constitution for All (Tehran: Amirkabir Publications, 1996).
Articles
- Hosseini Khamenei, Seyed Mohammad, “The Fourth Principle of the Constitution”, Bar Association Magazine, No. 152-153, (1990).
- Sinaii, Mohammad Taqhi, “The Difference between Governance and Entry and Allocation and Expertise”, Bar Association Magazine, No. 2, (1974).
- Nikoonahad, Hamed & Zandieh, Zahra, “Islamic Standards Governing the Application and Generality of the Principles of the Constitution in the Procedure of the Jurists of the Guardian Council; A Procedural Look at the Effects of Shariah Supervision on the Principles of the Constitution”, Knowledge of Public Law, No. 24, (2018).
- Hashemi, Seyed Mohammad, “Comparative and Thematic Review of the Revision of the Constitution of the Islamic Republic of Iran”, Journal of Legal Research, No. 8, (1990).