Skip to content

To sustain dynamic movements for peace, justice, and the environment, we need to galvanize those most impacted by them: young people. 

As a paid 10-week program, the Henry A. Wallace Fellowship Program offers young activists training in what we call “public scholarship” — the connection between policy research, advocacy, and grassroots activism. Through workshops, hands-on experience, and individualized mentorship, the Henry A. Wallace Fellowship Program looks to sharpen young scholar-activists’ voices and hone their skills.

This program is a transformation of IPS’s Next Leaders Interns program. It’s named for Henry A. Wallace, a key architect of the New Deal as FDR’s Vice President, Secretary of Agriculture, and Secretary of Commerce. This new program honors Wallace’s commitment to fighting fascism, militarism, and racism while championing democracy, workers, and racial and gender equity. 

The program features workshops with leading strategic thinkers at IPS and beyond. In addition to public scholarship skills like research, writing, and media training, the workshops will include the history of successful movements and lessons to be learned from both victories and defeats. Each cohort will leave the program with a more nuanced understanding of peace and environmental, racial, economic, and gender justice.

Photo of the 2024 Henry A. Wallace Fellows
The 2024 Henry A. Wallace Fellows

The Experience

Here’s a little bit more about how the program works. It’s broken into five parts:

1. Workshops. We’ve prepared a curriculum of biweekly workshops and gatherings geared toward the following:

Building community within your cohort.

Sparking intergenerational dialogue to brainstorm around new pressure points in the policy world.

Sharing skills needed to become a successful public scholar.

Providing a crash course on the frameworks, history, and current events of the progressive movement and policy sphere.

2. Individualized Mentorship. Each participant will get hands-on experience by working on one of our projects and will receive individualized mentorship and training from one of our IPS public scholars. Typical responsibilities include research, writing, attending events with core allies, and helping us with our social media presence. All of our interns also have the opportunity to work with our skilled editors and write for our in-house publications. 

Our interns work within one of the following core areas:

Economic Justice: Work with scholars who are among the country’s top experts on the growth of billionaire wealth, the gaps between CEO and worker pay, and the many ways wealth concentration threatens our economy, democracy, and planet.

Racial and Gender Justice: From our landmark studies on closing the racial wealth divide to our work supporting movements led by Black, immigrant, and women workers, help our experts power the movements to build a more just society for all of us.

Climate Justice: Our planet needs an urgent transition away from fossil fuels to a clean energy economy. As part of our climate work, you’ll help make sure the poor people and communities of color most impacted by climate injustice are leading that transition at all levels — local, state, national, and global.

Peace and Foreign Policy: Help us envision a foreign policy based on human rights, international law, and diplomacy — and a federal budget that puts people and the planet ahead of the Pentagon.

Communications: Building the progressive movement requires us to reach diverse audiences with compelling, targeted messages. Working with our communications team, you’ll learn strategies for amplifying progressive ideas in both traditional media outlets and through the use of social media.

Development and Operations: Interested in the nonprofit sector? Fundraising prowess and capable administration are critical to the success and long term health of every nonprofit organization, and this internship supports you in developing these essential skills.

3. Intergenerational Dialogue. A centerpiece of our definition of public scholarship is that we work on ideas with movement allies. Meeting with organizers and researchers with decades of experience, you’ll not only get plugged into the larger progressive network, but you’ll also be exposed to best practices of coalition building, grassroots activism, and organizing.

4. Coaching and Career Development. We want to see our fellows find lasting careers in social change. Each fellow will receive career coaching during the program and access to a growing Henry Wallace Fellows network for years to come.

5. Symposium and Strategy Sessions. A public event and internal strategy sessions  during the summer with key IPS allies offer lessons from successful campaigns.

Compensation and Academic Credit

IPS firmly believes that financial barriers shouldn’t exclude people from internship opportunities, and we are grateful to our donors who have made it possible to ensure this fellowship is paid. We offer an hourly wage of $18 to offset the cost of working with IPS while you help us build the future of the progressive movement.

At the same time, we strongly encourage applicants to find resources through their schools and other scholarships if they have the ability to do so. Many schools offer assistance for summer internship programs, and we ask that all applicants explore those options first in order to allow us to accept a greater number of fellows that do not have access to those resources.

Fellows may also receive academic credit, and IPS is happy to assist fellows in filling out any requisite forms to help with the credit process.

Application Information and Timeline

Applications for the summer Henry A. Wallace Fellowship Program typically open in March. Please check our Careers and Internships page then for more information on applying.

;

Subscribe to this issue

Don't miss out on the latest news on the Next Leaders Internship Program. Enter your email to receive updates in your inbox.

More articles on Henry A. Wallace Fellowship Program

Racial & Gender Justice | Articles

It Won’t Just Be Haitians Who Suffer From Anti-Immigrant Lies

Politicians are attempting to redefine who counts as an “American,” with my Black immigrant family and people like us on the outside.
Climate Justice | Articles

America’s Nuclear ‘Downwinders’ Deserve Justice

Countless Americans were poisoned by the nuclear arms race — and their federal compensation just expired. That’s an outrage.
Racial & Gender Justice | Articles

Teaching About Race Is Good, Actually. States Need to Stop Banning It.

Neither white students nor students of color benefit from laws that censor history, critical thinking, and open dialogue in the classroom.
Climate Justice, Economic Justice | Articles

Some Back to School Fashion Advice: Buy Less

The global fashion industry is a massive polluter and notorious for poverty wages. So let’s be conscious about our choices.
Economic Justice | Articles

Why We Need a Four-Day Workweek

Shortening the workweek reprioritizes the well-being of workers, addresses economic inequality, and aligns work with the needs of the modern era.
Economic Justice | Articles

Feeling Subscription Fatigue? You’re Not Alone.

In the digital era, companies use subscriptions to make you rent things you used to be able to buy. Federal regulations — and...
Racial & Gender Justice | Articles

The Troubling Trend of State Takeovers of Public Schools

Despite aiming to close achievement gaps, state takeovers of school districts worsen education inequality for low-income and minority students.
Economic Justice | Articles

AI Won’t Replace You — But It Will Spy on You

Short-term concerns about artificial intelligence replacing jobs are overblown, but that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t be aware of how it's already warping workplaces.
Economic Justice | Articles

We Need Our Public Libraries, and Now They Need Us Too

Our public libraries are already doing amazing work combating inequality — we just need to make sure they have the funds to keep...
Economic Justice, Racial & Gender Justice | Articles

Two Years After Dobbs, the Fight Goes On

In the two years since Roe fell, access to abortion has become ever more restricted. Despite legal losses, the fight for reproductive rights...
Climate Justice, Economic Justice, Racial & Gender Justice | Articles

Sustaining Rosa Parks’s Struggle for Transit Equity

Transit Equity Day 2024 offers opportunities for reflection and participation.
Economic Justice | Articles

Rural Inequality vs. Grassroots Land Reform: Brazil’s Landless Workers’ Movement Turns Forty

Rural land concentration compounds inequality and threatens democracy. Through grassroots land reform, this movement offers hope.

Henry A. Wallace Fellowship Program in the news

Help IPS turn progressive policy ideas into action

Unlike many research organizations, we’re not bankrolled by big corporations or any part of the government. As an ally to people-powered movements, we have to be people-powered ourselves. When you make a one-time gift or a monthly donation, you help build the better future we all want.