41.9 F
Cambridge
Friday, March 13, 2026
41.9 F
Cambridge
Friday, March 13, 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!

- Advertisement -

CATEGORY

World

It’s Not Easy Being Green: The Environmentalist Parties

It’s my party and I’ll cry if I want to. This sentiment, outlined in Lesley Gore’s 1963 hit, has seemingly been the manifesto of politicians...

WE won: Football as a Unifying and Dividing Force

Since its inception, football, commonly referred to as “soccer” in the U.S., has represented a unique platform for the public performance of identity. The football pitch has unified and divided, bound together and separated apart.

As Merkel Departs, Europe’s Conservatives Drift Into Political Winter

Europe’s conservatives must work to clearly define the identity of the EPP and ensure it is reflected throughout the party.

Robots that Kill: The Case for Banning Lethal Autonomous Weapon Systems

Soon, guided missiles and semi-autonomous drones may be replaced by fully autonomous weapons that have the ultimate say over who lives and who dies.

‘Patria y Vida:’ The Sound of Cuban Protests

Cubans no longer want to flee their motherland for destinations abroad. Rather, they want to see substantive and positive change at home.

Ending Orphanage Tourism for Good

Children living in orphanages are not tourist attractions. Although COVID-19 has briefly halted the flow of orphanage tourism, this practice must be permanently brought to an end.

Despite War Crimes Tribunal, Guerilla Violence Persists in Colombia

In theory, President Santos’ accord with the FARC, or the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, had ended a 52-year civil war that had claimed the lives of some 220,000 Colombians. In practice, the war continued.

Neocolonialism and the IMF

While traditional colonial practices involved the subjugation of countries through military and political dominance, neocolonialist states leverage the pulls of conditional loans, cultural hegemony, and economic superiority to sway another country’s foreign policy.

Why Thailand’s Young People Are Angry

Political turmoil continues to plague Thailand, and the country’s young people have suffered the consequences. Now, they protest for their future as much as their past. 

From Afghanistan to AUKUS: The Painful Pivot to Asia

The pivot to Asia is bound to be painful, but it need not be superfluously excruciating.