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The Review | Essay
Why Did Slavoj Žižek Become So Popular?
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The Review | Opinion
Why Stanford Law Students Were Right to Protest
The risk of appearing partisan when fighting for nonpartisan principles is not one we can run from. -
The Review | Essay
The Librarians Are Not OK
A years-long attack on their status is bad for all of us.
Latest Letters
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Librarians Are Critical to the Academic Community
They shouldn’t have to ask for a place at the table. -
Global Learning Provides Students With Meaningful Experiences
It helps them connect their co-curricular and personal experiences with their coursework. -
Essays on DEI and Academic Freedom Oversimplified AAUP Position
The president of the association clarifies its stance.
More Review
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The Review | Opinion
Students Shouldn’t Always Choose Higher-Paying Majors
A focus on small differences in future-earnings statistics can lead students astray. -
The Review | Essay
How to Combat Tribalism on Campus
Students are quick to condemn those who disagree with them. We must equip them to argue better. -
The Review | Conversation
At Many Universities, Organized Labor Is Treated With Contempt
Too often, unions are stonewalled, disrespected, and dismissed. -
The Review | Opinion
DEI Goals Are Worthy. Campus DEI Bureaucracies Fail Them.
Anyone and everyone can deploy the “harm” rationale to curtail academic freedom. -
The Review | Opinion
The Lost Art of Academic Conversation
Faculty members no longer have time to indulge in the free play of ideas. -
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The Review | Essay
We’re Distracted. That’s Nothing New.
Ever since Thoreau headed to Walden, our attention has been wandering. -
The Review | Opinion
Down and Out at the AHA
History is facing a jobs crisis. Why doesn’t the field talk about it more? -
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The Review | Opinion
Does Harvard Really Discriminate Against Asian American Students?
The data are far less damning than critics contend.