FOREIGN POLICY Wins National Magazine Award, Magazine Industry’s Highest Honor

Two and one-half years after it relaunched from a quarterly academic journal to a bimonthly, full-color magazine, FOREIGN POLICY is the winner of the 2003 National Magazine Award for General Excellence for magazines with a circulation under 100,000. This year was the first time FOREIGN POLICY has been named a finalist for the National Magazine ...

Two and one-half years after it relaunched from a quarterly academic journal to a bimonthly, full-color magazine, FOREIGN POLICY is the winner of the 2003 National Magazine Award for General Excellence for magazines with a circulation under 100,000. This year was the first time FOREIGN POLICY has been named a finalist for the National Magazine Awards, which are presented annually by the American Society of Magazine Editors in association with the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and are the magazine industrys highest honor.

Two and one-half years after it relaunched from a quarterly academic journal to a bimonthly, full-color magazine, FOREIGN POLICY is the winner of the 2003 National Magazine Award for General Excellence for magazines with a circulation under 100,000. This year was the first time FOREIGN POLICY has been named a finalist for the National Magazine Awards, which are presented annually by the American Society of Magazine Editors in association with the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and are the magazine industrys highest honor.

The National Magazine Award judges said, FOREIGN POLICY, a bi-monthly of global politics, economics, and ideas, is sophisticated enough for experts and accessible to concerned citizens. It is as timely as todays headlines, remarkably prescient, and creative in finding new ways to explore complex ideas.

The National Magazine Awards have been presented annually for 38 years. This year, the winners were chosen from among 1,305 entries by a judging panel comprising 160 editors, art directors, educators, and media experts.

The winners were announced on May 7 in New York City.

The day after the awards ceremony, the Washington Post called FOREIGN POLICY the magazine that dares to make international relations interesting to the non-policy-wonk community. Click here to read Foreign Policy, From Wonkish to Winner Magazine.

For a complete list of National Magazine Award winners, visit the ASME Web site.

This list was compiled by Brian Fung, an editorial researcher at FP.

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