Why IAS Gazette exists
International affairs often reaches readers in two unsatisfying forms: rushed updates that flatten complexity or dense analysis that forgets clarity. IAS Gazette works in the space between those extremes.
The aim is to publish writing that is informed, readable, and serious enough to reward repeat attention. That means building pieces around argument, evidence, and editorial judgement rather than empty urgency.
Editorial identity
The publication welcomes feature essays, opinion pieces, interviews, weekly recaps, and evergreen explainers that help students and wider readers keep pace with geopolitics, regional affairs, public policy, and political communication.
That breadth matters because global events do not sit neatly inside one desk. A good publication needs room for institutions, regions, technology, labour, culture, and the practical questions young writers bring to the field.
What readers and contributors can expect
IAS Gazette values well-shaped arguments, source awareness, and copy that respects the reader's time. Contributors are encouraged to bring perspective, but they are also expected to stay precise, fair, and structurally clear.
Readers looking for the current editorial board can move to the masthead, while prospective writers can review contributor guidance and the editorial policy before pitching.
