Authors
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Toussaint Nothias
Toussaint Nothias is Associate Director of Research at Stanford’s Digital Civil Society Lab and a Faculty Affiliate of the Center for African Studies.
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Leah Claire Kaminski
Leah Claire Kaminski’s poems have appeared in Bennington Review, Massachusetts Review, Prairie Schooner, Rhino, the Rumpus, and ZYZZYVA. Poetry Editor for the Dodge, Leah has three chapbooks published or forthcoming from Dancing Girl Press, Harbor Editions, and Milk and Cake Press. Read her work or get in touch at www.leahkaminski.com.
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Harsha Walia
Harsha Walia is an activist and writer based in Vancouver. Her latest book is Border and Rule: Global Migration, Capitalism, and the Rise of Racist Nationalism.
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Katrina Prow
Katrina Prow lives and writes in Santa Maria, California. Her writing has recently appeared in Taco Bell Quarterly, decomP, The Journal, Pithead Chapel, Redivider, Passages North, and elsewhere. She holds a PhD in Creative Writing, Fiction, from Texas Tech University, and she currently teaches Creative Writing at California Polytechnic University, San Luis Obispo. Her writing has been supported by residencies at Yaddo and Virginia Center for the Creative Arts. Read more of her published work at katprow.com.
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Brandi Nicole Martin
Brandi Nicole Martin is a poet and nonfiction writer. She was a runner-up for the 2020 Jeffrey E. Smith Editors’ Prize from the Missouri Review.
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Brian Clifton
Brian Clifton is the author of the chapbooks MOT and Agape. They have work in Pleiades, Guernica, Cincinnati Review, Salt Hill, Colorado Review, The Journal, Beloit Poetry Journal, and other magazines. They are an avid record collector and curator of curiosities.
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Jeff William Acosta
Jeff William Acosta is a poet from Ilocos Sur, Philippines. He is a co-winner of the Sahaya: Timpalak Pampanitikan (STP) 2021 of UP Sentro ng Wikang Filipino-Diliman, a 2021 Jack Grapes Poetry semifinalist, and 2022 Foley Poetry Contest finalist. His poems have been published or are forthcoming in America Magazine, Poetry Wales, Kritika Kultura, Tomás Journal, the Margins, the Worcester Review, Native Skin, NOVICE, Strange Horizon, and elsewhere.
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Hannah Craig
Hannah Craig lives in Pittsburgh. She is the author of This History that Just Happened. She was the winner of the 2016 New Measure Poetry Prize, the 2016 Mississippi Review Poetry Prize, and the 2017 Crab Creek Poetry Prize.Her work has recently appeared or is forthcoming in journals including the Gettysburg Review, Jet Fuel Review, and RHINO.
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Isha Camara
Isha Camara is a writing, performance poet and visual poet from South Minneapolis. She earned her degree in Human Development and Family Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison as a First Wave Alumna. Her work has been featured or is forthcoming in Southeast Review, Muzzle Magazine, Boston Review, Wisconsin Life, and Palette Poetry.
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Jonathan Levy
Jonathan Levy is James Westfall Thompson Professor of U.S. History and Social Thought at the University of Chicago. His latest book is Ages of American Capitalism: A History of the United States.
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Will Holub-Moorman
Will Holub-Moorman is a PhD student in history at Princeton, a JD student at Penn, and a Digital Fellow at the Society for the History of Children and Youth.
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Nicholas Coccoma
Nicholas Coccoma is a Boston-based writer who covers politics, religion, and culture. He studied philosophy and theology at Boston College.
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Nojang Khatami
Nojang Khatami is Assistant Professor of Political Science at Fordham University.
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Mike King
Mike King is Associate Professor of Criminal Justice at Bridgewater State University and author of When Riot Cops are Not Enough: The Policing and Repression of Occupy Oakland.
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Anil Gomes
Anil Gomes is Fellow and Tutor in Philosophy at Trinity College, Oxford. His book reviews have appeared in the Guardian and the Times Literary Supplement, and he featured in BBC Radio 4’s In Our Time episodes on Kant’s Copernican Revolution and Iris Murdoch.
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Tobias Hübinette
Tobias Hübinette is a Senior Lecturer at Karlstad University.
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Karen Levy
Karen Levy is associate professor in the Department of Information Science at Cornell University and associate member of the faculty at Cornell Law School. She is author of Data Driven: Truckers, Technology, and the New Workplace Surveillance.
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Chris Blattman
Chris Blattman is an economist and political scientist who studies global conflict, crime, and poverty. He is the Ramalee E. Pearson Professor of Global Conflict Studies at The University of Chicago, in the Harris School of Public Policy and The Pearson Institute. He also co-leads the university’s Development Economics Center and the International Policy & Development program at the Harris School.
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Alberto Polimeni
Alberto Polimeni is a writer in London. He studied philosophy and politics at King’s College London and the London School of Economics.
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adrienne maree brown
adrienne maree brown is a writer and activist. She is author of many books, including Loving Correction, Pleasure Activism: The Politics of Feeling Good, and We Will Not Cancel Us—and Other Dreams of Transformative Justice.
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Anthony Morgan
Anthony Morgan is editor of The Philosopher and commissioning editor for philosophy at Agenda Publishing.
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Joshua Gutterman Tranen
Joshua Gutterman Tranen is a queer Jewish writer based in Durham, North Carolina.
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Faraaz Mahomed
Faraaz Mahomed is a psychologist and human rights researcher based between his native South Africa and New York. His work has appeared in Granta, the Georgia Review, the Sunday Times, and elsewhere. In 2016, Faraaz won the Commonwealth Short Story Prize for the African Region. He has been runner up for the Superlative Short Story Prize and the Inaugural Toyin Falola African Literature Prize, and he has been shortlisted or longlisted for the Bristol Prize, the Afritondo Short Story Prize, and Boston Review’s Aura Estrada Short Story Prize. He is working on his first novel.
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