IAS Gazette Action Contributors

Action

Submit an Article

IAS Gazette makes article submission easier when writers lead with a clear angle, a workable scope, and a reason the piece matters now. It is built for writers who already know the question they want to answer and can explain how the article would help the reader think better. A focused submission route saves time on both sides and makes editorial review faster, fairer, and more consistent.

Editorial-style image for Submit an Article with editorial desk with a world map, newspapers, and route markings
Submission intake page for contributors

Who this route is for

IAS Gazette makes article submission easier when writers lead with a clear angle, a workable scope, and a reason the piece matters now.

This route is most useful for writers who already know the question they want to answer and can explain how the article would help the reader think better.

Supporting visual for Submit an Article showing editorial desk with a world map, newspapers, and route markings in a working editorial context
A visual note that matches the editorial rhythm of the page.

What a better next step looks like

A focused submission route saves time on both sides and makes editorial review faster, fairer, and more consistent.

Readers and applicants get more value when they move from curiosity into a defined action instead of sending a vague enquiry or waiting for the right moment to appear.

Good international affairs writing slows the reader down just enough to make the next headline easier to interpret.

Where it connects inside IAS Gazette

Keep going through Write for Us, Editorial Policy, and FAQ to build more context before or after the next step.

Move with a clearer purpose

A focused submission route saves time on both sides and makes editorial review faster, fairer, and more consistent.

A good next step after this page is Write for Us and Editorial Policy so the subject stays connected to a wider editorial path.

Closing call-to-action image for Submit an Article featuring readers, notebooks, and international affairs material