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Nasrin Sotoudeh
Human rights lawyer and activist
of 100 · stable trend · Visibly decent and improving
Standing
57/100
Raw Score
48/85
Confidence
70%
Evidence
Strong
About
Nasrin Sotoudeh is an Iranian human-rights lawyer whose strongest public pattern is sustained defense of vulnerable clients at major personal cost.
The observable record is strongly positive on social care, integrity, and resilience, but much thinner on private devotional practice and family-financial obligations.
Five Pillars
Pillar scores (0–100%)
The public record is strongest on costly service, legal courage, and endurance under repression; the largest uncertainty is private spiritual observability rather than observable harmful conduct.
Goodness over time
Starts at 100 at birth, natural decay after accountability age, timeline events adjust the trajectory.
17 Criteria Scores
Individual item scores (0–5) with evidence notes
Core Worldview
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Contribution to Others
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Personal Discipline
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Reliability
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Stability Under Pressure
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Timeline
Key events and documented turning points
Begins legal practice focused on rights cases
After writing about rights violations while working elsewhere, Sotoudeh began practicing law and entered Iran's human-rights legal network, focusing on women, children, and dissidents.
→ Established a long-term professional pattern of representing vulnerable people rather than commercially safer clients.
mediumRepresents post-election detainees, minors, and women targeted by the state
Before and after the 2009 protests, Sotoudeh became known for defending opposition detainees, minors facing execution, religious minorities, and women punished under state morality rules.
→ Her legal work repeatedly reached people with little institutional protection and high personal risk.
highArrested and later sentenced for her rights work
Iranian authorities arrested Sotoudeh in 2010 and later sentenced her on national-security-related charges tied to her peaceful legal and rights activity.
→ Her imprisonment became an early test of whether her advocacy would continue under coercion.
highWins Sakharov Prize while on hunger strike over pressure on her family
While serving a prison sentence, Sotoudeh undertook a long hunger strike protesting pressure on her husband and daughter and won the European Parliament's Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought.
→ The episode showed willingness to bear severe personal cost without abandoning her public commitments.
highReleased from prison and returns to rights advocacy
After release in 2013, Sotoudeh returned to defending women harmed by acid attacks, religious minorities, and campaigns against the death penalty despite continued restrictions.
→ Her post-release conduct suggested continuity rather than retreat.
mediumGiven a 38-year prison sentence and 148 lashes for peaceful legal advocacy
Amnesty and other monitors reported that Sotoudeh's 2019 sentence stemmed from peaceful human-rights work, including defending women protesting compulsory hijab laws and opposing the death penalty.
→ The sentence sharply escalated the cost of her advocacy while reinforcing her public reputation for steadfastness.
highLaunches hunger strike calling for political prisoners' release during COVID-19
During the pandemic, Sotoudeh undertook another hunger strike and publicly called for release of political prisoners whose health was endangered in Iranian jails.
→ The action reinforced a pattern of using her own body and liberty to advocate for others in immediate danger.
highArrested and beaten after attending Armita Geravand's funeral
Authorities arrested Sotoudeh after she attended the funeral of Armita Geravand without a hijab; advocacy groups reported that police beat her, broke her glasses, and held her before later release on bail.
→ The episode extended a longstanding pattern of punishment for public solidarity with women targeted by state enforcement.
highRearrested during a broader crackdown on Iranian human-rights defenders
Front Line Defenders reported that intelligence agents arrested Sotoudeh in Tehran on 1 April 2026, with no clear charge disclosed, amid intensified reprisals against defenders and anti-death-penalty campaigners.
→ The latest arrest indicates that the personal costs of her advocacy remain active rather than historical.
highPressure Tests
Behavior under crisis or scrutiny
2010 arrest and imprisonment
2010Authorities jailed Sotoudeh on charges tied to her rights work and restricted contact with her family.
Response: She continued to defend the legitimacy of peaceful rights advocacy and later resumed legal activism after release.
strong resilience2012 hunger strike over her daughter's travel ban
2012While imprisoned, Sotoudeh faced pressure on her husband and daughter, including an illegal travel ban on her child.
Response: She undertook a prolonged hunger strike until the ban was lifted.
strong resilience2019 long sentence and lashes
2019Authorities escalated punishment to a reported 38 years and 148 lashes for peaceful legal work.
Response: She remained a focal advocate for women and anti-death-penalty causes, later using hunger strike to argue for prisoners during COVID-19.
strong resilience2023 funeral arrest
2023Police reportedly beat and detained her after she attended Armita Geravand's funeral without a hijab.
Response: The broader pattern remained public solidarity with targeted women despite fresh risk.
strong resilienceProgression
crisis years
Repeated imprisonment, disbarment, and family pressure intensified but did not end the pattern of advocacy.
testedcurrent stage
Still treated as an active rights defender rather than a historical symbol.
contestedearly years
Moved from writing about rights violations into direct legal defense work.
upwardgrowth years
Expanded toward politically costly defense of protesters, minors, women, and minorities.
upwardBehavioral Patterns
Positive
- • Repeated advocacy for people with low institutional protection
- • High personal-cost commitment rather than symbolic commentary alone
- • Return to service after each release or medical furlough
Concerns
- • Private religious practice is not meaningfully documented in public sources
- • Many available sources are advocacy-focused because proceedings in Iran are opaque
Evidence Quality
8
Strong
2
Medium
0
Weak
Overall: strong
This profile evaluates observable public conduct and evidence quality, not hidden intention, private salvation, or undisclosed personal life.