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!
“I Am,” our Fall 2021 Magazine, is a labor of love from across the Harvard collegiate community. In the following articles, you will hear from more than a dozen authors who attest to how complex, contradictory, and confounding one’s identity can be.
The inherent nature of traditional media and social media — one that scrutinizes the livelihoods of celebrities — still exercises a form of control over Britney Spears, even from fans with good intentions.
In this moving photo essay, staff writer Charles Hua documents how small businesses in Cambridge have grappled with COVID-19. As he depicts the vibrant city’s efforts to reopen, he asks: What have we lost? And how will we recover?
Is it ethical to allow misinformation and inflammatory speech on social media platforms? What should be done about such speech? Staff writers Lauren Baehr and Jacob Ostfeld offer their perspectives.
The feature presents unfiltered quotes from my three conversations with three Harvard union leaders, who share the importance of recognizing Harvard employees and the potential that undergraduate students have to amplify these workers’ voices.
QAnon’s unprecedented popularity reveals not only the individual disillusionment of thousands of Americans, but also the larger American identity crisis that emerged leading up to, during and since the end of the Trump administration.
What has been the role of social media, not only as a contributor to 2020, but as a looking glass from which we can examine the lifetime and legacy of this historic year? Has social media obstructed hindsight 2020, or has it served to clarify the complicated mess of our recent history?