Register and submit your entries for the HIR Academic Writing Contest for students of grades 9-12. The deadline for submission is Jan 2!
The Harvard International Review is a quarterly magazine offering insight on international affairs from the perspectives of scholars, leaders, and policymakers. Since our founding in 1979, we’ve set out to bridge the worlds of academia and policy through outstanding writing and editorial selection.
The quality of our content is unparalleled. Each issue of the Harvard International Reviewincludes exclusive interviews and editorials by leading international figures along with expert staff analysis of critical international issues. We have featured commentary by 43 Presidents and Prime Ministers, 4 Secretaries-General, 4 Nobel Economics Prize laureates, and 7 Nobel Peace Prize laureates.
Inspired by our growing high school readership around the world, we have run the Harvard International Review Academic Writing Contest since 2020 to encourage and highlight outstanding high school writing on topics related to international affairs.
Participants in the contest submit a short-form article on a topic in international affairs. Each submission will be read and scored by the Harvard International Review.
A number of contestants will be selected as finalists, who are invited to participate in a virtual HIR Defense Day. At the Defense Day, students will have the opportunity to give a 15-minute presentation and oral defense to Harvard International Review judges.
All submissions must adhere to the following requirements, as outlined in the Submission Guide below.
Participants will have a choice of three different themes and must note which prompt they have chosen at the top of their submissions.
Theme A: Global Commons and Stewardship of Shared Resources
Theme B: Emerging Powers in a Changing Global Order
Theme C: Resilient Cities and Urban Futures
Contestants may choose either topic above when writing the article.
Content: Articles should address a topic related to international affairs today. Potential categories include (but are not limited to): Agriculture, Business, Cybersecurity, Defense, Education, Employment & Immigration, Energy & Environment, Finance & Economy, Public Health, Science & Technology, Space, Trade, and Transportation. Articles should examine the theme from a global perspective rather than focusing on the United States.
Length: Articles should be at least 800 words but not exceed 1,200 words (not counting diagrams, tables of data, or authorship declaration).
Writing Style: Submissions should present an analytically backed perspective on an under-appreciated global topic.
AI Policy: The usage of ChatGPT and other AI tools is strictly prohibited. Judges will be running all articles through multiple AI checkers, and articles that receive high AI generation scores across multiple checkers will be disqualified.
Excellent contest submissions will aim to present a topic holistically from a balanced perspective. Evidence and nuance are critical. Submissions should be well-researched, well-informed, and formal in style and prose.
The HIR does not accept op-eds, otherwise known as editorials or opinion pieces for its competition. Articles are expected to have a thesis but should not have an agenda. Submissions should also not be merely a collection of facts.
As a journalist organization, we ask that submissions follow AP Style’s newest edition. We also ask that submissions are culturally sensitive, fact-checked, and respectful.
Citation and Sources: All factual claims must be backed by a citation from a reliable source. All ideas that are not your own must be properly attributed. Citations should be made via hyperlinks. Non-digital sources are welcome but must be cited properly as per AP Style. See the examples above for examples of using hyperlinks for citations.
Resubmission Policy: Contestants have the option to resubmit their articles; however, the new submission must explore a different theme from the originally submitted article within the same contest year.
Article Submission Deadline: January 2, 2026
HIR Defense Day: February 5, 2026
All submissions will receive a score from the Harvard International Review based on the Evaluation Rubric described in the Submission Guide. Contestants that receive a passing score without qualifying for a HIR Defense Day will receive individual prizes. Finalists will be eligible for the following Gold/Silver/Bronze medals based on their scores and performance in the HIR Defense Day.
Commendation Prize: HIR Certificate
Outstanding Writing Content / Style Prize: HIR Certificate
High Commendation Prize: HIR Certificate
Bronze Medal: HIR Certificate and name listed on website (global top 20 percent)
Silver Medal: HIR Certificate and name listed on website (global top 10 percent)
Gold Medal: HIR Certificate and name listed on website (global top 3 percent)
All scoring and prize decisions are final. The contest will not be able to provide additional detail beyond the scores provided by HIR graders. All contestants who manage to submit their articles will receive a certificate of completion.
Students in countries outside of the United States (grades 9-12) are also welcome to submit. Submissions are expected to be written in English and with traditional American spelling. For more information on submissions in your country, please contact contest@hir.harvard.edu
Interested participants can register through this link.
The deadline for submission is January 2, 2026.