45.6 F
Cambridge
Tuesday, March 10, 2026
45.6 F
Cambridge
Tuesday, March 10, 2026

Harvard Political Review 2026 Journalism Fellowship

Are you a middle or high school student interested in journalism? Do you want to work one-on-one with experienced Harvard Journalists? Do you want to get published on the Harvard Political Review? If so, join the HPR's one-week bootcamp this summer!

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CATEGORY

Covers

Minneapolis in the Morning

Minneapolis is brimming with emotion. But perhaps love — for George Floyd and his family, for small businesses, and for the community — will win out in the end.

Where Do We Go From Here?

The United States of America is falling apart. With even greater challenges on the horizon, ones sure to continue to pull at the fabric of our society, my hope is that we can find it within ourselves to move forward with compassion.

What George Floyd Deserves

We owe it to Floyd to memorialize his life even as we demand justice for his death. And we owe it to George Floyd to do better by countless other Black Americans precisely where we failed him. 

Harvard College Democrats and Harvard Republican Club: The Importance of Political Discourse

https://youtu.be/Wec0wx-T21Q Associate U.S. Editor Chloe E.W. Levine moderates a dialogue between Menat Bahnasy, President of the Harvard College Democrats, and Wesley Donhauser, President of the...

A Cloud Over Cambridge

At Harvard, we spend a lot of time analyzing, discussing, and dissecting the world around us. Perhaps we should spend more time trying to make it better.

Culture Jamming: Subversion as Protest

By using the corporate tools of advertisement for their own purposes, jammers piggyback off of the power structures they hope to target.

Lasers: The Future of Protests

There is evidence to suggest that lasers could revolutionize protesting around the world, but the final decision to use a laser or not is fundamentally a personal choice all protesters need to consider. 

Good Protestor, Bad Protestor

It will take a tremendous but necessary effort in order to create a society that is more equitable for all of its participants. Until then, free expression will continue to be a right that is granted only to a select few.

Revolutionizing Harvard

As Harvard’s administration and students take lessons from the University’s history, they simultaneously set new precedents for future activism on campus, shaping future generations of student protest.

President’s Note

Across the globe, people and institutions alike are turning a critical eye to protest, examining both its immense power to provoke positive social change and its potentially damaging, often unintended consequences.