The Walrus Announces the Mansbridge Essay | Page 13 | Unpublished
Hello!
Source Feed: Walrus
Author: The Walrus Staff
Publication Date: June 15, 2026 - 14:01

Stay informed

The Walrus Announces the Mansbridge Essay

June 15, 2026

The Walrus is proud to announce a new partnership with Peter Mansbridge to launch the Mansbridge Essay, a new annual essay program supporting emerging writers in Canada.

The program will offer $5,000 to one winning writer whose original essay pitch explores an issue of pressing interest to Canadians.

The opportunity is open to permanent residents and citizens of Canada who are less than five years into their writing career. Applicants must submit a pitch—of no more than 500 words—outlining their proposed 2,500–3,000-word essay, including the topic and planned interviews. Alongside the pitch, applicants must add writing samples and their résumé when applying.

“At a moment when many doors into journalism are closing, the Mansbridge Essay is designed to open one,” said Carmine Starnino, editor-in-chief of The Walrus. “We’re immensely proud to partner with Peter Mansbridge and give an emerging writer the chance to pursue a bold idea and bring it to readers across the country.”

Pitch submissions open June 15, 2026, and close on July 15, 2026. The selected writer will be announced on August 17, 2026. The first draft will be due by the first week of September, and the essay will be published in The Walrus January/February 2027 issue, out in December. The essay will also be featured on thewalrus.ca.

More information, including submission guidelines and eligibility requirements, are available at thewalrus.ca/mansbridge-essay.

This marks the start of a ten-year-long partnership between The Walrus and Peter Mansbridge. 

The Walrus was proud to recently partner with the Mansbridge Charitable Foundation for our 2025 GivingTuesday campaign. Between the two foundations, there is a shared focus on championing early-career journalists.

This program’s focus on emerging talent extends to The Walrus’s editorial mandate through our fellowships and contributing writer program, along with providing a platform and development opportunities for the next wave of talented and diverse voices entering this industry. The Mansbridge Essay serves as a natural extension of this work.

For more information, contact: Monita Mohan, Marketing Director, The Walrus, at monita@thewalrus.ca

Social Media:X: @thewalrusLinkedIn: @The WalrusYouTube: @thewalrusTikTok: @thewalruscaFacebook: @The WalrusInstagram: @thewalrusBluesky: @thewalrus.caSubstack: @TheWalrus

About The WalrusThe Walrus provokes new thinking and sparks conversation on matters vital to Canada. As a registered charity, we publish independent, fact-based journalism across platforms; produce national, ideas-focused events, including our flagship series The Walrus Talks; and train emerging storytellers through our fellowship program. The Walrus is invested in the idea that a healthy society relies on informed citizens.

The post The Walrus Announces the Mansbridge Essay first appeared on The Walrus.


Unpublished Newswire

 
How a paper company and tariffs threw the world of stationery hobbyists into chaos The post I Finally Found the Perfect Planner. Then Trump Ruined It first appeared on The Walrus.
July 3, 2026 - 06:30 | Sarah Trick | Walrus
Good morning. The Canadian men’s soccer team will face its toughest challenge so far at the World Cup when it plays Morocco on Saturday. More on that below, along with EV range busters and extreme weather in parts of Canada. But first:
July 3, 2026 - 06:06 | Angela Pacienza | The Globe and Mail
As the United States celebrates its 250th anniversary of declaring independence of our common mother country, Canadians remain uneasy siblings with Americans, a new poll suggests. A new Postmedia-Leger poll shows 64 per cent of us think we’re nicer than Americans; another 54 per cent think we’re more cultured. Two-thirds find Americans more arrogant, while 82 per cent think we’re more admired in the world. “From the data I would say we have a sense of superiority over Americans in a number of areas — Canadians believe they are more humble, cultured and generally nicer,” said Andrew...
July 3, 2026 - 06:00 | Chris Lambie | National Post