Advisers

Before anything is published, it's reviewed by someone with more experience than we have. Our advisers check our pieces for accuracy and clarity, they don't write them, and they don't tell us what to think.

The Princeton Policy Review is written by high school students. That's the point, but it also means we ask people we trust to read our work before it goes out, the way any newsroom has editors above its reporters. Our advisers come from debate and policy backgrounds, where getting the evidence right is the whole game.

Our advisers

Preston Lieu

ADVISOR · REVIEWS FOR ACCURACY & CLARITY

A national-circuit debater and former team captain who now coaches at Potomac Debate Academy, studying economics at Princeton University.

We're adding one or two more advisers with backgrounds in local journalism and housing policy. As the Review grows, so does the group of people helping us get it right.

An adviser's job is to catch what we miss, a fact we got wrong, a claim we can't support, a place we weren't fair. The reporting, and the responsibility for it, stays ours.

Advisers review in a personal capacity. Their university and organizational affiliations are their own.