


We’re hiring a Science and Technology Correspondent
An opportunity to join our editorial staff in London
THE ECONOMIST is looking to hire a writer on science and technology, ideally based in London. The writer will mainly be responsible for covering emerging technologies—topics such as artificial intelligence, biotechnology or space. They will help shape The Economist’s thinking on new technologies and how they could affect society, business and economics. Some examples of relevant coverage are listed below.
Experience in journalism is not essential, but the ability to write clearly and entertainingly is, as is an expert understanding of how new technologies work. The writer should also be comfortable delving into and explaining the latest scientific research and, as required, able to write more broadly across the Science and technology section. They will be expected to appear on podcasts and films and at Economist events.
Applicants should send a CV and a sample article, suitable for publication in The Economist, to: [email protected]. It should be unpublished and no longer than 700 words. The deadline is February 24th.
Examples of coverage:
Large, creative AI models will transform lives and labour markets
AI could help unearth a trove of lost classical texts
Solar geoengineering is becoming a respectable idea
The engineering of living organisms could soon start changing everything
Jensen Huang says Moore’s law is dead. Not quite yet
How scientists are using artificial intelligence
Lab-grown models of embryos increasingly resemble the real thing
Fusion power is coming back into fashion
Superbatteries will transform the performance of EVs

Researchers in China create the first healthy, cloned rhesus monkey
Their new technique could make the routine cloning of primates easier

2023 was the hottest year ever
And 2024 could be warmer still

Simine Vazire hopes to fix psychology’s credibility crisis
Her new job editing the field’s most prestigious journal should help