By: Rebecca Lowe Syringe exchange programs are private or government funded programs that provide clean syringes to people who do…
By: Jacqueline Van De Velde When a memo from the White House hit state governments’ desks on Friday, September 23,…
By: Christen Hammock In the weeks following Troy Davis’ execution, many Georgians and Americans were left reeling, wondering what arcane…
By: Wes Robinson On September 26, 2011 Georgia Political Review’s Wes Robinson had the chance to sit down with the…
By: Stephanie Talmadge By now, newspapers could run the headline “EVERY MAJOR BANK IN THIS COUNTRY IS GOING BANKRUPT” and…
By: Tucker Green General Eugene E. Habiger graduated from the University of Georgia in 1963 before going on to serve…
By: Kelsey Thomas In the game of politics, there are always winners and losers. Redistricting – especially when one party…
By: Cody Knapp When protests against the rule of Libya’s long-time dictator, Muammar Gaddafi, began back in February 2011, few…
By: Tucker Green “The notion of a neutral, non-partisan mainstream press was, to me at least, worth holding onto. Now…
By: Emily Kopp Tories will have an easier time making their already-popular arguments about crime: that well-meaning efforts to liberalise…
By: Virginia McNally If you think cell phones have changed daily life and relationships in the West, you are right.…
By: Tia Ayele In an age where tablet sized computers are becoming the norm, it seems unfathomable that a seasonal…
By: Gautam Narula India’s current government, led by the center-left Indian National Congress (INC), has been plagued by corruption scandals.…
By: Jacqueline Van De Velde I’ve always been called something of a feminist. My parents raised me with the knowledge…