The Nation Student Writing Contest

The Nation Student Writing Contest

Win $1,000 and get published in The Nation! The Deadline has been extended to midnight on July 5th!

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The Deadline has been extended to midnight on July 5th!

 

Six years ago, The Nation launched an annual Student Writing Contest to identify, support and reward some of the many smart, progressive student journalists writing, reporting and blogging today.

This year, we’re looking for original, thoughtful, provocative student voices to answer this question in 800 words:

What do you think is the most serious issue facing your generation?

The contest is open to all matriculating high school students and undergraduates at US schools, colleges and universities, including those receiving high school or college degrees in the year 2011. (Those being home-schooled and studying at US schools abroad are eligible.) High school and college essays are judged in two different tiers respectively. We’re also considering adding a non-US category next year.

Entries are being accepted through June 30th. Both high school and college winners are published in The Nation and receive $1,000 and lifetime Nation subscriptions. Finalists are published at thenation.com and receive $250 plus free subscriptions.

Our first winner, Sarah Stillman, a Yale undergraduate and founding editor of Manifesta, a student feminist journal, set a high bar in 2006 with "Project Corpus Callosum," her meditation on student apathy and action. In 2008, we added a high school category and began naming two winners annually along with ten finalists.

Last year we asked students to tell us how their education had been compromised by budget cuts and tuition hikes. In a true sign of the times, we received a startling 1,000 submissions from forty-three states coast to coast.

Read last year’s winners, and please help spread the word!

Disobey authoritarians, support The Nation

Over the past year you’ve read Nation writers like Elie Mystal, Kaveh Akbar, John Nichols, Joan Walsh, Bryce Covert, Dave Zirin, Jeet Heer, Michael T. Klare, Katha Pollitt, Amy Littlefield, Gregg Gonsalves, and Sasha Abramsky take on the Trump family’s corruption, set the record straight about Robert F. Kennedy Jr.’s catastrophic Make America Healthy Again movement, survey the fallout and human cost of the DOGE wrecking ball, anticipate the Supreme Court’s dangerous antidemocratic rulings, and amplify successful tactics of resistance on the streets and in Congress.

We publish these stories because when members of our communities are being abducted, household debt is climbing, and AI data centers are causing water and electricity shortages, we have a duty as journalists to do all we can to inform the public.

In 2026, our aim is to do more than ever before—but we need your support to make that happen. 

Through December 31, a generous donor will match all donations up to $75,000. That means that your contribution will be doubled, dollar for dollar. If we hit the full match, we’ll be starting 2026 with $150,000 to invest in the stories that impact real people’s lives—the kinds of stories that billionaire-owned, corporate-backed outlets aren’t covering. 

With your support, our team will publish major stories that the president and his allies won’t want you to read. We’ll cover the emerging military-tech industrial complex and matters of war, peace, and surveillance, as well as the affordability crisis, hunger, housing, healthcare, the environment, attacks on reproductive rights, and much more. At the same time, we’ll imagine alternatives to Trumpian rule and uplift efforts to create a better world, here and now. 

While your gift has twice the impact, I’m asking you to support The Nation with a donation today. You’ll empower the journalists, editors, and fact-checkers best equipped to hold this authoritarian administration to account. 

I hope you won’t miss this moment—donate to The Nation today.

Onward,

Katrina vanden Heuvel 

Editor and publisher, The Nation

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