Khushboo Ranka
Documentary Film in the Public Interest Fellowship
Fall 2026, Spring 2026
A fellowship program that brings together practitioners and scholars pursuing self-directed projects at the intersection of media, technology, politics, and public policy.
Since its founding in 1986, the Shorenstein Center has hosted fellows from across media, technology, politics, and public policy to explore how essential information is created, conveyed, and consumed. The Shorenstein Fellows Program is central to this mission.
The Shorenstein Fellows Program brings together journalists, technologists, creators, scholars, policymakers, and political practitioners to pursue independent work while contributing to the Center’s broader research community. Fellows produce original content—such as op-eds, essays, webinars or stories—that advances public understanding of the information ecosystem.
We welcome mid- to senior-career professionals from a wide range of backgrounds, including:
The Shorenstein Center actively encourages applicants from diverse backgrounds and across the political spectrum.
Documentary film professionals and scholars should apply for the Documentary Film in the Public Interest Fellowship
Fellows are expected to:
Fellows work independently on projects developed in collaboration with the Center. Fellowships are one year in length and mostly remote, though Boston-based fellows are welcome to use the Center’s on-campus resources.
Fellows receive support from Shorenstein Center staff, a Harvard email account, and access to Harvard library resources—both online and in person—during the fellowship term. They are encouraged to build relationships across the Kennedy School and the broader Harvard community.
The Shorenstein Fellows Program is unpaid and free to participate in. Fellows receive travel stipends to support up to two trips to Cambridge during their fellowship year for program events and campus engagement opportunities.
After the fellowship ends, alumni are invited to remain engaged through continued writing, events, and student programming; however, access to Harvard systems, including email and library resources, concludes at the end of the fellowship term.
Please submit your application here. The next program begins on September 1, 2027, and applications are due by May 1, 2027. In some cases, fellows may be permitted to begin their fellowship in January. Please reach out to our research community lead, Emily Roseman, with any questions on your application: Emily_Roseman@hks.harvard.edu.
Documentary Film in the Public Interest Fellowship
Fall 2026, Spring 2026
Documentary Film in the Public Interest Fellowship
Spring 2026
Documentary Film in the Public Interest Fellowship
Spring 2026
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Shorenstein Fellowship
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Shorenstein Fellowship
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Shorenstein Fellowship
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Shorenstein Fellowship
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Shorenstein Fellowship
Spring 2026, Fall 2025, Spring 2025
Shorenstein Fellowship
Spring 2026, Fall 2025, Spring 2025
Shorenstein Fellowship
Spring 2026, Fall 2025, Spring 2025
Shorenstein Fellowship
Spring 2026, Fall 2025, Spring 2025
Shorenstein Fellowship
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Commentary
Explainers
Reports & Papers
Center News
Center News
Center News
Over 300 scholars, practitioners, policymakers, and other experts have joined the Shorenstein Center as fellows since its founding in 1986.