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About this journal.

The LSE Undergraduate Political Review (LSEUPR) is an online platform that aims to encourage and facilitate an engagement in high level political research by undergraduate students from universities around the world. The LSEUPR invites the application to politics of a range of disciplinary perspectives, both within and without the social sciences, both empirical and theoretical. LSEUPR welcomes submissions that represent any and all voices, and is committed to comprehensive representation, inclusivity and equality of access. Ultimately, our purpose is to familiarise undergraduate students with the rigours of the submission and evaluation process and to encourage them to think creatively about how to present their research.

Announcements

Lseupr's main website.

Please visit the main website of LSEUPR (https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/lseupr/) for all the general updates including the essay competition, available opportunities, division overviews, blog submissions, research resources, and upcoming events. 

The current website (upr.lse.ac.uk) is dedicated to the journal submission and publication only.  

International Scholarships

LSEUPR Annual Essay Competition

Description.

Each year we hold an essay competition for students who are yet to complete their A-Levels, IB or equivalent, i.e. those entering years 12 and 13, or equivalent. This year the essay question is “What is the most important lesson governments can learn from the Covid-19 epidemic?” and the deadline is 1 October. The essay should be no more than 1,000 words long, in order to not detract from the students’ studies, but could also be completed over the summer break. This essay competition was created to act as an outreach effort by the LSEUPR and as an opportunity to expose A-Level and equivalent students to university-style writing assignments in a relevant and engaging way, having recognised the desire for this during our own time at school. In addition, this presents an ideal piece of experience and name recognition for students wishing to apply to university to include within their UCAS personal statements. Exact details of the competition including how to apply can be found at the link below. Prizes are as follows: 1st Place Prize: £100 Amazon Voucher Certificate signed by Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey, Head of the LSE Department of Government Essay published in the LSE Undergraduate Political Review blog The opportunity to attend and to present your essay at the LSEUPR Annual Conference 2nd Place Prize: £50 Amazon Voucher Certificate signed by Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey, Head of the LSE Department of Government Essay published in the LSEUPR blog 3rd Place Prize: £25 Amazon Voucher Certificate signed by Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey, Head of the LSE Department of Government Essay published in the LSEUPR blog

Other Criteria

Each year we hold an essay competition for students who are yet to complete their A-Levels, IB or equivalent, i.e. those entering years 12 and 13, or equivalent. Do not apply if you do not fit into this age threshold.

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1 October

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3

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LSEUPR

1st Place Prize: £100 Amazon Voucher Certificate signed by Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey, Head of the LSE Department of Government Essay published in the LSEUPR blog The opportunity to attend and to present your essay at the LSEUPR Annual Conference 2nd Place Prize: £50 Amazon Voucher Certificate signed by Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey, Head of the LSE Department of Government Essay published in the LSEUPR blog 3rd Place Prize: £25 Amazon Voucher Certificate signed by Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey, Head of the LSE Department of Government Essay published in the LSEUPR blog

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LSEUPR Annual Essay Competition

Submission deadline, field(s) of study.

Unrestricted

Award Amount

Description.

Each year we hold an essay competition for students who are yet to complete their A-Levels, IB or equivalent, i.e. those entering years 12 and 13, or equivalent. This year the essay question is “What is the most important lesson governments can learn from the Covid-19 epidemic?” and the deadline is 1 October. The essay should be no more than 1,000 words long, in order to not detract from the students’ studies, but could also be completed over the summer break. This essay competition was created to act as an outreach effort by the LSEUPR and as an opportunity to expose A-Level and equivalent students to university-style writing assignments in a relevant and engaging way, having recognised the desire for this during our own time at school. In addition, this presents an ideal piece of experience and name recognition for students wishing to apply to university to include within their UCAS personal statements. Exact details of the competition including how to apply can be found at the link below. Prizes are as follows: 1st Place Prize: £100 Amazon Voucher Certificate signed by Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey, Head of the LSE Department of Government Essay published in the LSE Undergraduate Political Review blog The opportunity to attend and to present your essay at the LSEUPR Annual Conference 2nd Place Prize: £50 Amazon Voucher Certificate signed by Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey, Head of the LSE Department of Government Essay published in the LSEUPR blog 3rd Place Prize: £25 Amazon Voucher Certificate signed by Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey, Head of the LSE Department of Government Essay published in the LSEUPR blog

Other Criteria

Each year we hold an essay competition for students who are yet to complete their A-Levels, IB or equivalent, i.e. those entering years 12 and 13, or equivalent. Do not apply if you do not fit into this age threshold.

Contact Information

You must be logged in to view contact information.

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Number of Awards3
Host InstitutionLSEUPR
Includes1st Place Prize: £100 Amazon Voucher Certificate signed by Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey, Head of the LSE Department of Government Essay published in the LSEUPR blog The opportunity to attend and to present your essay at the LSEUPR Annual Conference 2nd Place Prize: £50 Amazon Voucher Certificate signed by Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey, Head of the LSE Department of Government Essay published in the LSEUPR blog 3rd Place Prize: £25 Amazon Voucher Certificate signed by Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey, Head of the LSE Department of Government Essay published in the LSEUPR blog
Nationality RequiredUnrestricted
Host CountriesUnrestricted

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LSE Undergraduate Political Review

LSE Undergraduate Political Review

Essay Competition 2021

Our Annual Essay Competition has returned!

Essay Question 2021:

To what extent have emerging social movements caused politicians to respond with effective social change .

  • £100 Amazon Voucher
  • Certificate signed by Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey, Head of the LSE Department of Government
  • Essay published in the LSEUPR blog
  • The opportunity to attend and to present your essay at the LSEUPR Annual Conference
  • £50 Amazon Voucher
  • £25 Amazon Voucher
  • Exploration:  this is a chance to engage with the topic and to explore your ideas and thoughts in a new way, outside the confines of academic stress from examinations and grades.
  • Experience:  for those of you wishing to apply to university, this essay competition is a chance to produce an evidence-based, long form piece of writing. This is exactly the kind of work you will be regularly asked to produce at university, LSE or elsewhere!
  • Prestige:  taking part in this competition is an achievement in itself and something that you can discuss in interviews, on your CV, and your personal statement for university.

Eligibility

  • You must be yet to complete your A-Level studies, IB or equivalent, i.e. about to begin year 12 or 13 of secondary school or equivalent.
  • Students from any country are allowed to enter, the competition is not limited to the UK, but is limited by level of study.

How to Enter:

Submission specifics:.

  • Must be written in English.
  • Please note: any in-text citations, footnotes and headings are included in the word count, but the title, bibliography and appendix, if applicable, are not included.
  • Arial font, sized 12.
  • Standard 1-inch margins.
  • Submit essay as a PDF.
  • It is extremely important to cite your sources. You are free to use any established referencing style (APA, Chicago, Harvard), as long as its use is consistent.
  • Ensure that the PDF essay entry is completely anonymised, there should not be any personal details such as name or school attended included within the PDF.
  • This is an independent piece of work. While you are free to discuss the topic with your peers/teacher, the final submission ultimately needs to be your own work. Plagiarism is a serious case of academic misconduct and will be met with disqualification.
  • Submissions that are explicitly biased, agenda-fuelled, or without strong supporting evidence, are discouraged – scholarly essays are not columnist opinion pieces.

Essay Writing: 

  • General guidance on academic essay writing: https://info.lse.ac.uk/current-students/lse-life/resources/podcasts/academic-writing-basic-principles
  • Developing your essay thesis: https://writingcenter.fas.harvard.edu/pages/developing-thesis

Structuring your essay:

  • https://writingcenter.fas.harvard.edu/pages/essay-structure
  • https://info.lse.ac.uk/current-students/lse-life/resources/podcasts/essay-writing-planning-and-structure

Writing a clear introduction:

  • https://info.lse.ac.uk/current-students/lse-life/resources/podcasts/essay-writing-the-introduction

Ensuring your essay is clear and easy to follow:

  • https://writingcenter.fas.harvard.edu/pages/topic-sentences-and-signposting
  • https://writingcenter.fas.harvard.edu/pages/transitioning-beware-velcro

Writing an impactful conclusion:

  • https://writingcenter.fas.harvard.edu/pages/ending-essay-conclusions

Editing your essay:

  • https://writingcenter.fas.harvard.edu/pages/editing-essay-part-one
  • https://writingcenter.fas.harvard.edu/pages/editing-essay-part-tw
  • https://writingcenter.fas.harvard.edu/pages/developing-thesis

Referencing your Essay

General overview:   https://student.unsw.edu.au/referencing

  • Chicago: Chicago Manual of Style (17 th Edition): https://owl.purdue.edu/owl/research_and_citation/chicago_manual_17th_edition/cmos_formatting_and_style_guide/chicago_manual_of_style_17th_edition.html
  • https://owl.purdue.edu/owl/research_a
  • https://student.unsw.edu.au/apa
  • Harvard : Harvard style https://student.unsw.edu.au/harvard-referencing
  • Footnotes & bibliographies: https://student.unsw.edu.au/footnote-bibliography-or-oxford-referencing-system

Topic Specific Resources:

The study of social movements is vast and it can be difficult to know where to start. If you are unsure of where to begin, here are some resources that can kick off your research:

LSE Research on Social movements 

  • https://www.lse.ac.uk/middle-east-centre/research/smpm/papers ]
  • http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/88297/1/Ishkanian_Social%20Movements_Accepted.pdf
  • http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/29695/1/__Libfile_repository_Content_Campbell,%20C_Heeding%20the%20push_Heeding%20the%20push%20(lsero).pdf

Background on social movements and effective change: 

  • https://hbr.org/2017/01/how-protests-become-successful-social-movements
  • https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/how-lsquo-good-rsquo-social-movements-can-triumph-over-lsquo-bad-rsquo-ones/

Background on specific examples of critical social movements: 

  • https://harvardpolitics.com/rhodes-must-fall/
  • https://www.globalcitizen.org/en/content/rhodes-must-fall-founder-racist-statues/
  • https://library.law.howard.edu/civilrightshistory/BLM
  • https://www.pewresearch.org/internet/2016/08/15/the-hashtag-blacklivesmatter-emerges-social-activism-on-twitter/
  • https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-india-51004204
  • https://thewire.in/law/jnu-sedition-case-umar-khalid-kanhaiya-kumar-delhi-court
  • https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-india-51005444
  • https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-47952787
  • https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-africa-34592527
  • https://globalclimatestrike.net/

Examples of responses to protests: 

  • https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-oxfordshire-57189928
  • https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-oxfordshire-57175057
  • https://myscp.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/jcpy.1201

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Hi, when will results be announced? Before Oct. 15th which is oxbridge application deadline?

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Hi there! Thank you so much for your interest in the essay competition. We are aiming to complete the review process before the 15th October deadline for the benefit of Year 13 students but we cannot guarantee that this will happen. However, we would still strongly recommend that you submit a piece as partaking in prestigious essay competitions (such as this!) can add a lot to your personal statement.

I hope this helps!

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Hi, there! May I ask whether I have to focus on BLM movement as stated below the question, or can come up with totally new social movements that I want to deal with? Thank you:)

Thank you for your question! You absolutely do not have to focus on the BLM movement. You can choose to talk about any social movement you like: such as the Climate Strikes or the student-led gun control movement in the USA (March for Our Lives). You may even want to talk about a few! Do look at our ‘Topic Specific Resources’ section for more pointers on different types of social movements you could discuss. However, do remember to choose the social movements carefully and ensure they are relevant to the question and give you enough material to talk about.

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Can the word count go a little over 1000 words?

Hi there! You should ensure that is it under 1000 words. Cutting down your essay is a very important skill and something you will have to do many times if you decide to go to university! Look for unnecessary words and sentences which are too long.

' src=

I have completed my essay on the Nirbhaya movement which occurred in 2012-2013. I couldn’t find any specific date details other that it needing to be recent . Is this okay? Thank you !

Hi there! That’s absolutely fine, we’re looking forward to reading your work soon!

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Essay Competitions for Year 12 Students: A Complete Guide

essay competitions for year 12 2024

I must confess that essay competitions were not a thing when I applied to uni. But then when I applied to uni, all that was required was a decent pass in all my A-Levels and a part-time job in McDonalds. The story for today’s teens is not so simple.

Today I’m sharing a guide to independent essay competitions run by colleges and other organisations. This is a chance for students to share work they’ve already done, or create a fresh essay on a topic set by the organisers.

While you’re here, don’t miss our other guides for Year 12 students:

  • Complete guide to pre-university summer schools
  • Oxford and Cambridge admission tips from an admissions director
  • 50+ super curricular activities for Year 12 students

Table of Contents

Why essay competitions are useful

Essay competitions for Year 12 students are a great way to build up your UCAS application. They’re a great example of a super-curricular activity. They show universities that you have a genuine interest in a subject, and expending your learning beyond the classroom.

This is important if you are applying for a competitive course like English or Psychology, or a competitive university like Oxford or Cambridge. We’ve focused on English and humanities here because that’s what my teen is researching. But if you want to study something else, this guide includes relevant essay competitions in other areas for Year 12 including law, philosophy and history.

There are essay competitions in LOADS of subject areas. The below essay competitions for Year 12 (and sometimes other years) could help. Not only by showing your commitment. If you win a prize, then you could mention this in an application. Some essay competition prizes include attendance at a university open day, providing a valuable way to stand out to admissions teams.

Complete Guide to Essay Competitions for English Lit Students

Below you’ll find a list of Year 12 essay writing competitions that are aimed at, or suitable for, English students. Some of these competitions won’t open until later in the academic year. Others are open for entry in 2024 for students applying to university in 2024/25. I’ve indicated a month of closing for each competition. I’ve also provided a brief description of each competition and details of prizes. Click through to find out more.

Girton College Humanities Writing Competition

Girton College, Cambridge, runs an annual competition for humanities essays, which is suitable for students wanting to apply for English at university. It’s also a great opportunity for students of history, geography, economics and other humanities.

The essay prompt is an exhibit from the college’s museum collection, and students are invited to submit an essay inspired by that item. Winners receive prizes of up to £200. It’s worth noting that only three students per school can enter this competition. The submission deadline is MARCH and the prize is £200.

Find out more  

Minds Underground Essay Competitions

This scientific focused from Minds Underground essay competition has a category aimed at ‘senior’ students, which means Year 12. There are actually multiple essay categories covering science, geography, medicine, veterinary science along with history, english and classics.  The submission deadline for all categories is April 3, 2024.

Find out more

Immerse Education Essay Competition

This annual essay competition has an unusual prize – a place at the annual pre-university summer school run by Immerse Education in Oxford, Cambridge or London. It’s a highly competitive competition and the standard of entries is high. The deadline is January each year, further details available online.

Sheffield Philosophy Essay Competition

This competition has small prizes of £50 but worth entering for the kudos. It’s open to students in Years 10, 11 and 12, and invites you to write an essay of 1,500 words on one of five ethical/moral questions like ‘Can animals be moral?’. The competition opens in January and closes in May.

Sheffield History Essay Competition

The University of Sheffield is also running a history essay competition for 2024, which is open until April 26, 2024. To enter the competition, Y12 students must create a 1500 word essay on one of 5 history prompts. Worth noting you can win £100 if you get a prize, but there can only be two entrants from each school or college.

ISA Essay Competition

While some competitions are only open to state school students, the ISA Essay challenge is open only to students attending independent schools that are part of the Independent Schools Association.

The competition is open to students of all ages and entries are judged in various categories, including one for Year 12 and 13 students. The competition opens in February 2024 and closes in May. There’s also an annual poetry competition that might be worth considering for literature students.

Find out more 

New College of Humanities Essay Challenge

NCH London also runs an annual essay competition for Year 12 students, which is open worldwide. The contest includes various categories that may be of interest to future English students. Entry is open to students in Year 12, and the essay prompts will be published on September 5 or thereabouts. Students need to submit a 1,500 word essay by the following January. The overall winner of this competition gets a £1,000 prize. There’s also £500 or £200 for the runners up.

essay competitions for Y12 2024

NU London Essay Competition

This competition is not yet open for 2024, but information on the annual essay competition run by the Northeastern University, London can be found online. The competition is open to students in Year 12, and covers technology, social science and humanities topics. Expect questions to be posted in January and the competition usually runs until April.

Fitzwilliam College Essay Competitions (various)

This year, Fitzwilliam college, Cambridge, is running a series of essay competitions in Ancient World and Classics, Archaeology, Economics, History, Land Economy, Medieval World and Slavonic Studies. Entries must be submitted by the end of March 2024. Students must be in year 12 and there is a limit of 5 applications per school per competition. Helpfully, the college is running a couple of webinars in essay writing, to help students make the most of the competition.

The Hugo Young Award

If you’re a budding journalist or activist, the Hugo Young award is run annually by the Guardian newspaper and is open to people aged 16-25. The prize is to create a short piece of journalism on a topic of your choosing.

There is a specific category for 16-18 year olds (if you’re under 18, you’ll need an adult to confirm your entry) and the award is open to anyone from a state school background, although entries from traditionally under-represented groups are especially welcome. You can win £100 in book vouchers, a Guardian subscription and certificate.

The Rex Nettleford Prize

Run by Oriel College, Oxford, this essay competition focuses on the enduring influence of colonialism on our lives. The rules encourage students to engage with the legacies of colonialism in all its forms – historical, political, economic, social, cultural. Entry is via a 2,500 word essay, and is open to students in Year 12. The prize is £250, and your entry needs to be submitted by 15 March, 2024.

Magdalene College Essay Competition 2024

This competition has not yet opened for 2024, but you can register for more information and to get an alert when entries open. Traditionally, the competition is open to arts and humanities students in Year 12, and is open to students currently in state school education.

essay competitions for english students

Newnham College Essay Competitions

The Newnham competition has been in the news recently because it has changed its rules so that students from independent schools may NOT enter their essay competition. Newnham is a Cambridge college, and as such, they’re trying to distance themselves from the idea that they favour students from privileged backgrounds. Fair enough.

The Newnham competition offers a number of essay prizes, that are open to female students in Year 12. The college provides webinars and guides outlining how to submit and create your essay. Entries are submitted each March, and there is a maximum of four entries permitted in each subject, per school. Details of the Woolf essay, which opens each summer, can be found online.

LSE Undergraduate Political Review

This competition has not yet been opened for 2024 but you can see the format of the competition for 2023 and the winning entries on the LSE UPR website.

This competition invites students in Year 12 to write an 1,000 word essay on a political prompt. The prize includes a £100 Amazon voucher, a certificate signed by the head of LSE’s government department and a chance to present at the annual LSEUPR conference.

Trust for Sustainable Living Essay Prize

This competition is open to school students of all ages but the secondary category is for students aged 11-18 and only requires a 600-word essay on a topic around sustainability.The brief for 2024 – “How can nature help us achieve the UN SDGs in my community?” You will need to have your entry submitted by a teacher or other adult aged 18+.

The Peter Cane Legal Reasoning Prize

If you’re an aspiring lawyer in Year 12 or Year 13, this competition by Corpus Christi College, Oxford. The competition opens in January and closes in February. Winning entrants will be invited to a debate at the college later in the year. This year’s essay prompt is a hypothetical legal case and students are invited to submit an essay outlining their view of the case and reasons why they take the position they do.

The Libra Essay Prize

The Libra competition is for students in Y11 and Y12 preparing for university – it opens each year in January and closes in April 2024. There are actually essay questions across eight categories including science, English, history, economics and more. Essays can be up to 2,000 words and winners will receive vouchers of up to £50 for each category.

Royal Institute of Philosophy Essay Competition

If you reckon you could write 1,200 words on the theme ‘Can Machines Think’ then you might be up for the first ever Royal Institute of Philosophy Think! essay competition. There aren’t any monetary prizes but the winners’ entries will be published by the Institute and that’s got to be worth mentioning on your university application!

The St Johns College Classics and Ancient History Prize

This annual competition is now open and closes in March 2024. There are questions for students of classics and history, including classical literature. To enter, students must submit a 2,000 word essay on one of five questions, and could win a £100 book voucher as a prize. In addition, everyone who submits an essay is invited to the college for an open day, including tours and workshops.

Oxford IQ Essay Competition

Similar to the Immerse Education essay competition, the Oxford IQ essay competition gives students the chance to win a free place on a summer pre-university programme in Oxford. Essays are judged on a rolling basis, but must be submitted by March 2024. Entering is something of a process. You need to first register interest in the summer programme including writing a statement on why you want to attend the session, and you’ll receive details of the competition and the essay questions within 48 hours. You can then start your entry, and you’ll be informed within a week of submission if you have been successful.

The Mary Renault Prize

St Hughes College Oxford runs two essay competitions each year. The first focuses on history , the second on classics. The classics essay is worth considering if you’re aiming for an English degree. The competition welcomes entries from students not currently studying Latin/Greek at A-Level, and your essay can focus on classical literature. There are 2 prizes available, worth up to £500. Entries must be 2,000-2,400 words and submitted by late July. Winners are also invited to visit the college for tea!

Queens College Year 12 Essay Contest

Queens College Cambridge runs an annual English essay competition for Year 12 students, demanding a 2500 word essay for a change to win a £500 prize! Entries close in March and the winner is announced in May. In addition to the cash prize, the winner is invited to the college open day and several previous winners went on to study at Cambridge.

The John Locke Institute International Essay Competition

While not strictly aimed at English students, this global contest is very well known and the breadth of topics means you can take a literary approach to another discipline. Students can submit essays across seven different subjects. They are Philosophy, Politics, Economics, History, Psychology, Theology and Law. There are three questions set for each topic, and you can choose your favourite. Entries close in June each year.

The Betty Haigh Prize

Many sixth form students of literature will study Shakespeare and this essay competition is the perfect place to showcase your best work.

To enter the competition, students need to write a 1500 word essay that compares a scene in a Shakespeare tragedy to a film or TV adaptation, OR write a standalone essay exploring how a TV or film adaptation of a Shakespeare drama has thrown new light on the original text. Entries close in September 2024, and winners generally receive book vouchers as prizes.

2022 essay competitions

Gould Prize for English Literature

One of the best essay competitions for english students is the Gould Prize, which is awarded annually by Trinity College, Cambridge.

Candidates are invited each year to submit an essay of between 1,500 and 2,500 words on a topic to be chosen from the list of questions. Entries must be submitted by August 1, with a first prize of £600 to be split between the student and their school or college. Each year there are six questions to choose from, covering novels, poetry and drama.

Robinson College Essay Prize

You don’t enter the Robinson College essay competition because of the prizes – you’ll get a £50 book token if you win. But you’ll get lots of kudos AND an invite to a celebratory award lunch at the college, where you can meet the dean. Similar to the Gould prize, the Robinson College prize poses a series of challenging questions and invites students to answer them from their own perspective. Questions are carefully selected so they’re applicable to literature but also philosophy, history, law and science. This particular competition will not run in 2024.

There you have it! 26 of the best essay competitions for Year 12 students, that you can apply for in 2022. Missed something from our guide? Let me know in the comments!

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  • Collaborations

Vera Anstey Essay 2024-25

Vera_Anstey_(cropped)

'She was very good at games and very good in the social life of the School. What she saw in that fool Anstey I never could make out. She could buy and sell him & live by the profit in two seconds.'

~ Lilian Knowles , Professor of Economic History, to Director Professor William Beveridge, recommending Vera’s hire at LSE, in 1921.

TOPIC:  'SAARC should be Revived to make South Asia a Global Powerhouse'

DEADLINE: 31 March 2025, 1700 hrs

ELIGIBILITY

The competition is open to ALL registered, full-time LSE Masters students in any course/department (including MRes, One-year Executive Masters & Joint-Masters). You do not have to be studying South Asia-related courses/modules to enter this essay competition.

Please ensure that your essay is on the topic mentioned above; please do not submit your coursework essay for this competition.       

HOW TO SUBMIT YOUR ESSAY

  • Essays should be an original piece of writing, and not something that you have submitted as coursework or published elsewhere on any other platform.
  • Essays should be between 800-1,200 words (max), and should be written in English.

Send your essay to Deputy Director Dr Nilanjan Sarkar at [email protected] with a covering sheet mentioning your name, course and LSE Student ID number. 

Please do not mention your name anywhere in the essay. 

  • Waterstones Book Vouchers worth £250.
  • Publication of winning essay in the ‘ South Asia @ LSE ’ blog.

WINNING ESSAYS

  • 2023-24: Zaid Ahmed Abro (LSE Masters in International Social and Public Policy), 'Polling Agents: An Unlikely Agent for Development in South Asia' (for the topic 'Politics is a Barrier to Social Change in South Asia').
  • 2022-23:  Shaurya Dev (LSE Masters in International Relations), 'What could "Decolonisation" mean for Contemporary South Asia?' .
  • 2021-22: Elias Khoury (LSE Masters in Public Policy & Administration), ' South Asia: A Frontier for Sustainability on a Dying Planet ' (for the topic 'How can South Asia Contribute to Global Development?').
  • 2020-21: Ritika Arora-Kukreja (LSE MRes/PhD in International Development), ' The Threat of Consent ' (for the topic 'What is the Biggest Challenge facing South Asia in the Next 10 Years?').

LSESU Economics Society

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LSE’s Largest Academic Society

Unparalleled speaker opportunities, groundbreaking research, and the home of all things economics: welcome to the economics society..

As the largest academic society at the London School of Economics, with over 800 students across all disciplines and years of study and exclusive support of the Economics Department, we provide unparalleled speaker, careers, and learning opportunities to our members.

In addition to our annual Economics Symposium and Policy Competition, our society offers weekly informal Sen Club discussion sessions with economists, regular corporate events and exciting socials, and opportunities to publish in the UK’s only undergraduate economic research journal, Rationale

We aim to cater to all students with an interest in economics, complement our members’ economics education, and provide outlets for intellectual debate and lighthearted discussion on any and all issues relating to economics.

Special Events

We host several special events, including our Economics Symposium in November that invites renowned academics and policy experts to discuss a pertinent theme in economics and our Economic Policy Competition for students. In addition, we organise such social events as the annual Bank of England visit and formal dinner that are exclusive for our members.

One of our are many opportunities for socialising with other students and researchers.

The Amartya Sen Club

Founded in 2015, Sen Club is our weekly discussion group, where we dissect wide-ranging themes in economics with prominent economists. Last year, we hosted 22 academics from leading European and American universities, including  6 recipients of the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences. Join us online or on campus every Tuesday!

The work of the Research Division and Rationale journal

Undergraduate Research Opportunities

Our award-winning research division offers members opportunities to master statistical software through the annual Research Incubator Programme and conduct independent econometric research. Last year, our members produced five research papers, which are published in our student peer-reviewed journal – Rationale – with the aid of the LSE Economics Department.

Information about the leading students

Executive Committee

Every Lent Term, we elect a team of ambitious students to run our general operations and the work of our subcommittees – Sen Club, Research, Special Events, Marketing, and Corporate Outreach – for the upcoming academic year. Recruitment for junior positions takes place in Michaelmas Term, and all members are encouraged to participate.

Information about how to contact us

Contact Information

Contact us on our email address ( [email protected] ) with any queries and follow our social media for frequent updates on events and opportunities. Our student and associate memberships are available for purchase through the LSE Student Union website.

We will be announcing soon the 2023 Essay Competition. Please do not email asking for updates as the competition for 2023 is still under development. Feel free to follow @lsesueconsoc on Instagram for the most frequent updates; otherwise, please wait until our 2023 Essay Competition is posted.

Our sponsors

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Charles River Associates

Nera economic consulting.

NERA Economic Consulting is a global firm of experts dedicated to applying economic, finance, and quantitative principles to complex business and legal challenges. For more than six decades, we have been creating strategies, studies, reports, expert testimony, and policy recommendations for government authorities and the world’s leading law firms and corporations.

RBB Economics

RBB Economics  is an economic consulting firm that provides independent, expert economic advice on all aspects of competition law. Consultants combine intellectual rigour with practical knowledge and technical economic skills to deliver analysis that is robust, clear and effective. RBB Economics is hiring analysts and offers summer internships every year.

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IMAGES

  1. LSEUPR School Essay Competition 2022

    lse politics essay competition

  2. 2020 Essay Competition

    lse politics essay competition

  3. Essay competition 2018 winner: "The cornerstone of democracy rests on

    lse politics essay competition

  4. 2024 LSE Master's Student Essay Competition: Visit to Parliament

    lse politics essay competition

  5. Grimshaw Club Essay Competition Winner 2023

    lse politics essay competition

  6. 2020 LSEUPR ESSAY COMPETITION

    lse politics essay competition

COMMENTS

  1. Essay Competition 2021

    The opportunity to attend and to present your essay at the LSEUPR Annual Conference. 2nd Place Prize: £50 Amazon Voucher. Certificate signed by Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey, Head of the LSE Department of Government. Essay published in the LSEUPR blog. 3rd Place Prize: £25 Amazon Voucher.

  2. The Essay Competition

    The Essay Competition 2024. The competition is closed now, thank you! Home. Sen Club. Research. Special Events. Our Team.

  3. LSEUPR School Essay Competition 2022

    1st Place Prize: £100 Amazon Voucher. Certificate signed by Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey, Head of the LSE Department of Government. Essay published in the LSEUPR blog. The opportunity to attend and to present your essay at the LSEUPR Annual Conference. 2nd Place Prize: £50 Amazon Voucher.

  4. 2022 LSEUPR Essay Competition

    After careful discussion and consideration by the LSEUPR Executive Committee, we are delighted to announce this year's winners: First Place: Magnus Alexander Gravell. Second Place: Maja Balazy. Third Place: Christian Baluta. We would like to offer our congratulations to all who participated. The hard work put into all submissions was clear to ...

  5. LSE Undergraduate Political Review

    The LSE Undergraduate Political Review (LSEUPR) is an online platform that aims to encourage and facilitate an engagement in high level political research by undergraduate students from universities around the world. The LSEUPR invites the application to politics of a range of disciplinary perspectives, both within and without the social sciences, both empirical and theoretical.

  6. 2020 LSEUPR ESSAY COMPETITION

    2020 LSEUPR ESSAY COMPETITION - WINNERS. This year LSEUPR launched its 3rd annual essay competition, aimed at incoming or outgoing year 12s and 13s (or equivalent), to give them real experience in writing an academic essay. The question for this year is. What is the most important lesson for political leaders to learn from the COVID-19 pandemic?

  7. LSEUPR Annual Essay Competition

    Each year we hold an essay competition for students who are yet to complete their A-Levels, IB or equivalent, i.e. those entering years 12 and 13, or equivalent. ... Head of the LSE Department of Government Essay published in the LSE Undergraduate Political Review blog The opportunity to attend and to present your essay at the LSEUPR Annual ...

  8. PDF Society Essay Competition 2024 LSESU Economics

    The best essay by an LSE offer holder will recieve: Professor Ricardo Reis Prize. Book and signed certificate by Professor Ricardo Reis. Submit your entry by 30th July 2024. 11:59 pm. GMT+1. via the . official entry form. Entries must be in English and at . 1,500 words. maximum. Results will be announced early. September. Each entrant can only ...

  9. 2021 LSEUPR Essay Competition

    This question required engagement with current affairs, critical reading, academic referencing and analytical writing - all of which was given an incredibly good effort by those who submitted. After careful reading by the members of LSEUPR Editorial Division, we arrived at this year's winners: First place: Salil Jain (India)

  10. LSEUPR Annual Essay Competition

    Each year we hold an essay competition for students who are yet to complete their A-Levels, IB or equivalent, i.e. those entering years 12 and 13, or equivalent. ... Head of the LSE Department of Government Essay published in the LSE Undergraduate Political Review blog The opportunity to attend and to present your essay at the LSEUPR Annual ...

  11. Essay Competition 2020

    Our Annual Essay Competition has returned! Essay Question 2020: What is the most important lesson for political leaders to learn from the COVID-19 pandemic? In early 2020, a major outbreak of SARS‑CoV‑2 spread across the globe. ... Head of the LSE Department of Government; Essay published in the LSEUPR blog;

  12. Master's students essay competitions

    The Phelan US Centre essay competition is only open to LSE students at Master's level. Unfortunately, former, or future LSE Master's students are unable to apply. Entries from Undergraduate or PhD students will not be accepted. All entries must be the original work of a current LSE Master's student, following the same standards of academic ...

  13. Politics Essay Prizes

    LSE UNDERGRADUATE POLITICAL REVIEW ESSAY PRIZE. ... THE JOHN LOCKE INSTITUTE ESSAY COMPETITION. Entry is open to students from any country and any school. Each essay should address only one of the questions in your chosen subject category, and must not exceed 2000 words. There is a prize of £100 for the best essay, and the essay will be ...

  14. Essay Competition 2018

    The LSE UPR is pleased to announce its first essay competition, in which we hope to encourage incoming and outgoing year 12 and 13 students to tackle current, complex topics outside of the standard academic curriculum. The UPR is a platform for leading undergraduate research, supporting students in engaging with academic debates of a broadly political nature.

  15. Master's students Essay Competition on Capitalism

    The LSE Phelan US Centre's Essay Competition sought 1000-word articles from current LSE Master's students on capitalism and the United States. ... The winning entry and runners up were published on the LSE United States Politics and Policy Blog (USAPP). With over half a million visitors every year this is an excellent chance for LSE students to ...

  16. Essay Competition 2021

    The opportunity to attend and to present your essay at the LSEUPR Annual Conference. 2nd Place Prize: £50 Amazon Voucher. Certificate signed by Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey, Head of the LSE Department of Government. Essay published in the LSEUPR blog. 3rd Place Prize: £25 Amazon Voucher.

  17. 2020 Essay Competition

    The opportunity to attend and to present your essay at the LSEUPR Annual Conference. 2nd Place Prize: £50 Amazon Voucher. Certificate signed by Cheryl Schonhardt-Bailey, Head of the LSE Department of Government. Essay published in the LSEUPR blog. 3rd Place Prize: £25 Amazon Voucher.

  18. Essay Competitions for Year 12 Students: A Complete Guide

    This competition invites students in Year 12 to write an 1,000 word essay on a political prompt. The prize includes a £100 Amazon voucher, a certificate signed by the head of LSE's government department and a chance to present at the annual LSEUPR conference.

  19. Competitions and prizes

    Academic prizes are awarded for students of each year of study. These are presented to students after the relevant examination board meetings. Prizes to the value of £250 are awarded annually as follows: for the best IR100 Theories and Concepts of International Relations examination performance by an IR student.

  20. LSEUPR Annual Essay Competition 2023: First Place Essay

    Predicted to boost the global economy by over fifteen trillion dollars by 2030 (PwC, 2023) after years of low productivity since the global financial crisis, AI can revolutionise myriad sectors. The healthcare industry will benefit from faster detection of diseases, more personalised treatments, and advancements in medicines.

  21. Vera Anstey Essay 2024-25

    Publication of winning essay in the 'South Asia @ LSE' blog. WINNING ESSAYS. 2023-24: Zaid Ahmed Abro (LSE Masters in International Social and Public Policy), 'Polling Agents: An Unlikely Agent for Development in South Asia' (for the topic 'Politics is a Barrier to Social Change in South Asia').

  22. LSESU Economics Society

    Essay Competition 2024. As the largest academic society at the London School of Economics, with over 800 students across all disciplines and years of study and exclusive support of the Economics Department, we provide unparalleled speaker, careers, and learning opportunities to our members. In addition to our annual Economics Symposium and ...

  23. Essay Competition

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