As part of the Fall 2022 Campus Poll series this semester, the Harvard Political Review seeks to understand the views of Harvard undergraduates on a variety of political topics, from campus politics to cultural issues to national policy.
Continuing from the Winter Poll released in March 2022, the Harvard Political Review sought to understand the views of Harvard undergraduates on a variety of political topics, from campus politics to cultural issues to national policy.
What can be done when federal and state governments fail to act with urgency to stop global warming? Over 150 Harvard and MIT students wrote and signed an open letter this summer with an answer: Demand action on the municipal level.
Which is more jarring: a domineering statue of a man known as the face of colonialism in Southern Africa, or a broader host of houses, dormitories, professorships, streets, and towns punctuating Harvard’s campus?
Across the street from the richest college in the world, people are dying on the street. There are a lot of good people in this town, though, trying their hardest to make a difference and to help others.
The musical makes a pretty controversial claim: those who do objectively bad things in the name of a doctrine, like bringing back the devil, shouldn't be seen as monsters.
In the end, I most sincerely hope that voters engage not with the mudslinging and personal politics but with the substantive visions that each campaign proposes.
Continuing with its quarterly tradition established in Spring 2021, the Harvard Political Review set out to understand the political views of undergraduates at Harvard College throughout the past few months.
It’s no secret: If colleges were graded on the school spirit of the student body, Harvard would earn an F. Why has Harvard failed to foster this collective culture that is so celebrated elsewhere?