The Fraser Institute’s 2024 Student Essay Contest is NOW OPEN! Join the conversation and showcase your ideas on public policy by entering our Student Essay Contest for the chance to win the grand cash prize! Winning essays may be published in Fraser Institute journals and authors will have the opportunity to experience the peer review process.
Student Essay Contest
2024 Student Essay Contest - What would the Fraser Institute's Essential Scholars say about the world today?
Unprecedented is a word that has been used repeatedly to describe all aspects of the last few years: a global pandemic, challenges of unemployment, overwhelmed healthcare facilities, high inflation, revolutionized AI, the rise of electric vehicles, etc. Governments often respond to remarkable moments in history by creating policies they feel would help address the situation.
Consider what insights our Essential Scholars series can offer the current situations and events? Relying on the ideas of one of our Essential Scholars, construct an essay that describes a scholar’s response, explanation, or rebuttal to a current event. You can use a scholar’s economic theory to examine unprecedented situations, propose potential policies that a scholar would have put forward, or suggest how certain existing policies may have been adapted by a particular Essential Scholar.
Example Essay Questions:
- What would Milton Friedman argue should be a government’s response to inflation?
- In a post-COVID world, what would Jane Jacobs say about the state of our cities?
- How can Joseph Schumpeter’s concept of creative destruction help us understand the rise and fall of businesses or new technology?
- What would one of the Essential Scholars say about Canada’s current housing and rent situation?
- How might F.A. Hayek address today’s current unemployment rate and what policy recommendations might he suggest?
STUDENT ESSAY CONTEST APPLICATION RULES
- The contest is open to students studying in Canada and to Canadian students studying abroad. Upon request, Canadian students studying abroad will be expected to provide proof of citizenship. A student is defined as someone who attends school in the 2023/2024 school year or is enrolled to attend in 2024/2025.
- Submissions will be considered from secondary and post-secondary (undergraduate and graduate) students in all disciplines.
- There will be three separate categories: high school, undergraduate, and graduate students. The category definitions are based on your status in the 2023/2024 school year; for example, if you are an undergraduate student from fall 2023 until spring 2024, you qualify in the ‘Undergraduate’ category.
- An essay can have more than one author, and any prizes awarded will be split evenly between the authors. The category in which the essay will be considered will be that of the author with the highest level of education; for example, if you are an undergraduate student and you coauthor with a graduate student, your essay will be considered in the graduate category.
- Essay must be between 1,000-1,500 words, not including references.
- Entry must be a single document, the header of each page of the essay must include the author’s full name and a page number.
- Essay entry must include a cover page, which the name of the author(s), mailing address, phone number, and e-mail address. High school students should include school and grade. Postsecondary students should include school, major, and year of graduation.
- Entries must be submitted online in .pdf or .doc format.
- Entries may only be submitted once. Further submissions with revisions will not be accepted.
- Entries must include references cited from academic sources. Any academically acceptable referencing style may be used.
- Please note that if you are a finalist and include a graph in your essay, you will be required to send it to us in an Excel file with the underlying data in order that we can recreate it in-house. If you want to include a previously published graph for which you do not have the underlying data, you must cite its source appropriately to prove that you have permission to reuse it.
- Failure to follow these rules may lead to disqualification from the contest.
- Entries will be judged on originality, clear expression of ideas, the ability to empirically support their argument and understanding of competitive markets and/or the impact of government intervention.
- All entries and ideas become the property of the Fraser Institute. In addition to receiving cash prizes, winners may be published in Canadian Student Review once they have gone through the peer-review process.
- Winners will be announced in the fall of 2024.
Awards Available: 15
Award Deadline: Register to View