History
Officially founded in October 2004 at Cornell University by Kevin Hwang (Cornell '07), The Triple Helix was (and still remains) the first and only international undergraduate print journal of its kind in the world. It rapidly expanded to include chapters at the University of Pennsylvania, Princeton University, Harvard University, Johns Hopkins University, Dartmouth College, and University of California, Berkeley, with chapters subsequently being built by students at MIT, Columbia University, UCLA, Carnegie Mellon University, Brown University, University of Chicago, Yale University, and more. Initially a campus journal at Cornell, The Triple Helix evolved into a national, student-run, interdisciplinary publication examining legal, social, and political issues in science. Early March 2005 saw the release of 1000 copies of The Triple Helix to students and faculty at Cornell University for the first time ever. The positive response was overwhelming as comments and recognition poured in all over campus. At the same time, chapters at University of California, Berkeley and University of Pennsylvania were successfully forming. By May 2005, work on the first national issue was well underway. Students at MIT, Brown University, Georgetown University, and Columbia University became interested in starting their own chapters to engage their student bodies in a growing national dialogue. In late May, Chapter presidents from various universities, and the Board of Directors met in the Silicon Valley (Palo Alto, California) area to discuss the future direction of the national organization. By February 2006, domestic expansion within the United States was essentially halted despite the interest nationwide. Instead, the focus was on international expansion. The first two international chapters of The Triple Helix, at the Indian Institute of Technology Kanpur and Oxford University, were set up and then soon followed by Cambridge University, the National University of Singapore, the University of Hong Kong and The University of Melbourne. These pioneering chapters became the framework for future expansion of the organization, and a restructuring of the organization was put into effect during Summer 2006. For adminsitrative purposes this organised chapters into four roughly geographic clusters (though the emphasis remains on global participation and exchange):
Chapters in a region are coordinated by a Regional Management Team; this is a subsidiary of the International Executive Management Team, which centrally runs the Literary (Editorial, Print Publishing and e-Publishing), Business, and Information Technology divisions of The Triple Helix. In October 2006, The Triple Helix launched a High School offshoot of its main publication, entitled "The Copernicum". This initiative, designed to enagage 15-18 year olds in the discussion of societal aspects of scientific progress, is currently trialling in North America. Main PublicationThe Triple Helix, Inc. publishes both online and in print form. Each chapter publishes its own print "edition" of The Triple Helix. One half of an "edition" usually consists of national/international features, which are the best articles published around the world. The other half of an "edition" consists of articles written by the chapter and only published at the chapter. Writers undergo multiple rounds of editing, often including a faculty review process. Issues are printed on a biannual basis. The electronic publication division publishes an electronic journal on a biweekly basis. Staff writers consist of students from both non-chapter and chapter universities, and they publish articles which are featured on the front page of our national website. The articles undergo an editorial process and include short news briefs, longer features, op-eds, and letters to the editor. Stated mission
External links
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