List of United States Magazines - Politics

Politics

  • The American Conservative (conservative, founded 2002, circulation as of 2005 15,000)
  • The American Prospect (liberal, 1990, 100,000)
  • The American Spectator (conservative, 1967, 50,000)
  • The Atlantic (liberal, 1857, n/a)
  • The Brown Spectator (conservative and libertarian, founded 2002, n/a)
  • Commentary (neoconservative, 1945, 25,000)
  • Commonwealth (non-partisan, 1996, 10,000)
  • Democracy (progressive/liberal, 2006, n/a)
  • First Things (Christian conservative, 1990, n/a)
  • The Freeman (libertarian, 1946, n/a)
  • Harper's Magazine (liberal, 1850, 220,000)
  • Human Events (conservative, 1944, 75,000)
  • Human Rights Quarterly (liberal, 1979, 1,533)
  • In These Times (liberal, 1976, 20,000)
  • Jewish Currents (Jewish left, 1947, n/a)
  • Liberation (pacifist, 1956, n/a)
  • Liberty (libertarian, 1987, n/a)
  • Lilith (Jewish feminist, 1976, n/a)
  • Lumpen (arts, 1991, n/a)
  • Moment (Jewish-diverse, 1975, n/a)
  • Mother Jones (left, 1976, 201,233)
  • Multinational Monitor (liberal, 1980, n/a )
  • The Nation (left, 1865, 139,612)
  • National Review (conservative, 1955, 162,091)
  • The New Republic (center-left, 1914, 90,826)
  • The New York Review of Books (liberal-left, 1963, 140,000)
  • The New Yorker (liberal and non-partisan, 1925, 1,062,310)
  • Policy Review (center-right, 2001, 6,000)
  • Politics (non-partisan, 1980)
  • The Progressive (left, 1909, 68,000)
  • The Progressive Populist (liberal, 1995, 20,000)
  • Reason (libertarian, 1968, 52,000)
  • Sojourners (Christian, 1971, n/a)
  • Tikkun (Jewish-left, 1971, 20,000)
  • Utne Reader (liberal, 1984, n/a)
  • Washington Monthly (center-left, 1969, 18,000)
  • The Weekly Standard (conservative, 1995, 65,256)
  • YaleGlobal Online (international, globalization and anti-globalization, 2002, n/a)
  • Z Magazine (left, 1987, 20,000)

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Famous quotes containing the word politics:

    It is not so much that women have a different point of view in politics as that they give a different emphasis. And this is vastly important, for politics is so largely a matter of emphasis.
    Crystal Eastman (1881–1928)