Nigeria by: Jason Seavey Background Boko Haram is an Islamist militant group that operates in Nigeria, Chad, Niger, and Northern Cameroon[1]. According to the US…
The Prog
If you dig through Princeton files long enough, you will find a plain Microsoft document entitled “FINE WINES AT PRINCETON UNIVERSITY: A Manual for the…
The Workers’ Rights Organizing Committee (WROC) came at the turn of the century, when Princeton’s campus was flooded with human rights concerns, including the anti-sweatshop…
This June, the popular North American socialist magazine Jacobin published an article by Freddie deBoer titled “Student Activism Isn’t Enough: Eight reasons why universities can’t…
When walking through Princeton University, one can’t help but admire its quaint footpaths lined with lampposts, pockets of trees, rolling lawns, and scattered buildings in…
It sounds obvious to some—to others not so much—but it is incredibly difficult for socioeconomically disadvantaged students to thrive at Princeton without assistance beyond basic…
On June 26, 2015, the Supreme Court decided in favor of extending to same-sex couples the right to marry. The case, Obergefell v. Hodges, made…
In the tenth grade, my teacher introduced me to the notion of what she called “good trouble”: political action that is disruptive, erratic, or even…
"People don’t realise that to be a centrist in French politics, and Macron is called a centrist, is very different from being a centrist in American politics." Christopher Russo interviews Professor David Bell about the French Presidential election.
By Seyitcan Ucin and George Kunkel This morning, members of Princeton Private Prison Divest (PPPD) – a coalition of Princeton University students, faculty, and staff…