We’re commissioning 2,000–4,000-word pieces that:

  • Tell a compelling story about how something works – or fails to work – in the developing world.
  • Combine deep subject knowledge with accessible storytelling.
  • Surface important but underreported trends, people, or institutions.

We’re especially interested in:

  • Unexpected success stories: projects, entrepreneurs, or policies driving real change.
  • Unexpected failures: what can we learn from development projects that didn’t work?
  • Technological innovation: AI, energy, urban planning, or health breakthroughs in low- and middle-income countries.
  • Institutional and policy experiments: from land titling to regulatory reform.
  • Unusual empirical insights – we welcome all your graphs, charts, and cost-effectiveness analyses!

Our readers include policymakers, researchers, and practitioners in development. We are keen, when appropriate, to link to current or future policy debates.

Deadlines

We accept pitches on a rolling basis, but review at specific times. We will next review pitches beginning July 1, 2026.

What to Include in Your Pitch

Please send a short document (no more than one page) outlining:

  1. The core idea: What question or problem does your story explore?
  2. The angle: Why this story, now? What makes it surprising or illuminating?
  3. A brief bio. Include 1–2 links to previous work if available. This may be essays, academic work, or other examples of writing.

Send pitches to submissions@indevelopmentmag.com with the subject line: Pitch: [Your proposed headline]

Unfortunately, we won’t be able to respond to every pitch with feedback; if your pitch is accepted, we will be in touch within two weeks.

Payment and Process

Payment is $2,000 upon publication. In general, the editorial process will involve 2-3 rounds of revision, in addition to fact-checking and copy-editing; the process will likely take 1-2 months.