Jewish Student Press Service Directory
The Jewish Student Press Service Inc (JSPS) was founded in 1971 as an independently-funded wire service to connect Jewish student magazines and newspapers from campuses across North America. Today, through New Voices Magazine and our community programming, JSPS proudly continues its original mission as a hub for independent media projects by and for the next generation of the Jewish press.
The JSPS Directory is a listing of independent publications and organizations either created by or serving Jewish journalists and mediamakers ages 18-24. This list contains magazines, digital publications, campus newspapers, podcasts, collectives, zines, and more. The JSPS Directory also includes independently funded Jewish media publications and organizations that have expressed affinity with JSPS, whether by supporting our programming, collaborating through fellowships, or otherwise supporting our work.
The JSPS Directory was created as both a resource and a living archival document of the who's-who of today's independent Jewish press, with an emphasis on projects and publications created by Jewish young adults. We hope you'll connect with the publications, communities, and organizations on this list.
You can submit a publication or organization listing by clicking the button below. If a publication or organization is listed but the listing is incomplete, either fill out the form linked by the button below or contact editor@newvoices.org for updates, corrections, and questions.
Jewish Student Press Service Directory
Challah Magazine. An independent production offering peer-to-peer Jewish content to inspire our community. A place to carve out a Jewish landscape online and offline.
Chaveleh Zine.(est. 2021) An online space and digital zine by and for young progressive jews to share creative work, learn and explore ideas, connect with community, and have fun.
Jewish Women, Amplified. (est. 2006) Jewish Women, Amplified is the blog of the Jewish Women’s Archive. In this space, we reflect on topics from feminism to family, gender to Judaism, politics to pop culture, ritual to relationships, activism to art—and everything in between. Here, we start conversations, stimulate debate, and inspire each other to think and act boldly. @jewishwomensarchive
Jewish Teens for Empowered Consent. Fighting for dialogue + change around toxic hookup culture in Jewish youth spaces.
jGirls+ Magazine jGirls+ Magazine is an online community and magazine for self-identifying Jewish teenage girls, young women, and nonbinary teens to share their voices with the world and each other. All content is created by teens ages 13-19 and edited by a teen editorial board, and our site’s aesthetic is shaped by teen staff photographers.
Judaism On Our Own Terms. Judaism On Our Own Terms is a network of students and groups that aims to share resources and knowledge across North American campuses, and bring together new independent communities in the process.
Judaism Unbound (est. 2015) Judaism Unbound is a digitally driven, radically open center for education serving as a catalyst for an entirely new era of Judaism. We empower regular Jews who are disenchanted with or disconnected from mainstream Judaism to develop new ways of living Jewishly. Global, with emphasis on North America. @JudasimUnbound
Lilith Magazine (est. 1976) Since 1976, Lilith magazine charts Jewish women’s lives with exuberance, rigor, affection, subversion and style. Based in New York City. @LilithMagazine
Verklempt! (est. 2022) We are Havurah, a Jewish arts collective for young Jewish artists, writers, musicians, and all other kinds of creatives. We are based in New York City but are currently putting together the first issue of our literary magazine Verklempt! that will be distributed globally. @HavurahFolk
Washtenaw Jewish News (est. c.1960s) Monthly print newspaper serving the Washtenaw County (Michigan) Jewish community. Washtenaw County, Michigan.
Yente Zine (est. 2022) Yente zine is a Jewish, Queer collective; we have a publication which are printed around the times of the chagim. The focus is on bringing out silenced voices. @yentezine
Zaman Collective. (est. 2019) when six Iranian Jewish students met up in Los Angeles to share some good food and talk about our experiences as Mizrahi Jews in the Western diaspora. This collective serves to ask thought-provoking questions about the present and the future just as much as it will work to understand the past. The timeline of Mizrahi Jewish life is inherently nonlinear; it is one where memory and current realities often exist in simultaneity rather than in succession— which gave us more than enough reason to choose the name ZAMAN (زمان) meaning time in Farsi, Arabic, and Turkish, and appearing in Hebrew as the word zman (זמן).