These elections saw great levels of public participation and civic engagement and still tend to be viewed as an "historic moment"[2] and important opportunity for citizens to play an active part in the management of their municipalities at a local level.[4]
In many large cities, especially Tehran and Isfahan, candidates from 2nd of Khordad movement won the elections. Independents were elected in most rural areas, reflecting concern for local issues which competed with the wider national debate over an emerging “civil society.”[5]
The elections marked an unprecedented presence of women in politics of Iran, 114 women won first or second place in 109 cities.[6]
There were 23,668,739 votes cast in this election.[1]
^Golnar Mehran (August 2003). "The Paradox of Tradition and Modernity in Female Education in the Islamic Republic of Iran". Comparative Education Review. 47 (3). University of Chicago Press: 272. doi:10.1086/378248. JSTOR10.1086/378248.(subscription required)
^ abcdefghMenashri, David (2012), The Post-Revolutionary Politics in Iran: Religion, Society and Power, Routledge, pp. 99–100, ISBN9781136333644 – via Salam newspaper, 16 March 1999.