IHRAM Blog
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IHRAM Blog *
The IHRAM Press magazine was created with a simple goal: to celebrate and uplift up-and-coming authors from all over the world. Each of our contributors contend with their identities in the context of their environments, providing readers with their unique perspectives on issues of human rights.
IHRAM Press Magazine proudly provides a platform for these voices, offering a space for poetry and prose to resonate with reflections of emotion, hope, and the enduring connection to one’s identity.
Writer Feature: Jadi Campbell
The Writer’s Notebook: featuring Jadi Campbell. Jadi Campbell is from Germany / Upstate New York. Jadi is one of IHRAM Press’s treasured writers. In this interview, she shares her musings, inspiration, and honest thoughts on her experience with us as an author and activist.
Artist Feature: Avis Blackbird
The Artist’s Notebook: featuring Avis Blackbird. Avis is an Indigenous writer from Vancouver, Canada. She is also one of IHRAM’s treasured artists. In this interview, she shares her musings, inspiration, and honest thoughts on her experience with us as an artist and activist.
Writer Feature: Emma Goldman-Sherman
The Writer’s Notebook: featuring Emma Goldman-Sherman. She’s from the United States and is one of IHRAM Press’s treasured writers. In this interview, she shares their musings, inspiration, and honest thoughts on their experience with us as an author and activist.
Celebrating women in translation month
Celebrating Women in Translation month with Loranne Vella and Sepideh Razmjoo.
Loranne contributed a bold piece in “the Feminine Voice of Malta” anthology, advocating for female writers & translators. Sepideh contributed vulnerable writing and art to “Iranian Women Speak" anthology, fighting for social justice through art.
Writer Feature: Ginger Strivelli
The Writer’s Notebook: featuring Ginger Strivelli, a writer from the United States.
Artist Feature: Fen Hsu
The Artist’s Notebook: featuring Fen Hsu, an artist from the United States.
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Out Soon: IHRAM’s last Literary Magazine for 2025
Stories on the Move: Voices of the Unhoused.
Having a place to call home is a privilege that many of us take for granted. For some, the right to housing and shelter often seems like a hopeless struggle to remedy.
The authors and artists in Stories on the Move document personal experiences and depict reflections on homelessness through lyrical narratives and affirming poetry. These stories brim with glimmers of hope, unveiling the realities of housing adversities while also reinforcing a deep resilience for a better life. Featuring sixteen writers and four artists, this magazine provides a heartwarming and empathetic insight into the lives of the unhoused.
IHRAM Press Magazine proudly provides a platform for these voices, offering a space for poetry and prose to resonate with reflections of emotion, hope, and the enduring connection to one’s identity. The IHRAM Press magazine was created with a simple goal: to celebrate and uplift up-and-coming authors from all over the world; each of the authors in this anthology contend with their identities in the context of their environments, providing readers with their unique perspectives on issues of human rights.
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2025 Quarterly Literary Magazine
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The Evolving Gaze
$10
The featured authors and artists share raw first-hand experiences and bring a broad spectrum of perspectives to the forefront, challenging traditional notions of masculinity. Drawing from generational and cultural heritage, they embrace progressive ways of thinking and reflect on their forefathers’ experiences to redefine identity and self-expression.
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Invisible Chains
$10
The authors and artists in Invisible Chains speak volumes, from Iran and Morocco, to the United States and Canada. They reflect on cultural discrimination, financial struggles, and the mental turmoil brought about by forceful migration and contemporary slavery. Through their stories, we rise up and represent those suppressed or oppressed, to foster more inclusive spaces for immigrants and refugees.
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Enduring Voices
$10
The authors and artists in Enduring Voices capture the reality of living with various medical conditions and types of neurodivergence (whether their own or their loved ones’) with unflinching honesty and vulnerability. They re-affirm autonomy over invisible illnesses or hidden personal struggles and their stories emphasize the resilience required to live through each day.
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2024 Quarterly Literary Magazine
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Resilience Amidst Displacement
$10
Home is a privilege so many of us take for granted. Whether it’s a simple roof over our heads, enclosed walls to shelter our loved ones, or the luxury of a locked door. The authors and artists featured in Resilience Amidst Displacement: Voice of a Refugee bravely share their stories and reflect upon the experiences of others; tales of being torn from home, watching their cities destroyed from afar, navigating unfamiliar cultures, and reconstructing their understanding of home within themselves.
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Reflections of Feminine Empowerment
$10
The pieces featured in this quarter’s magazine explore themes of economic parity, workplace equity, and the ongoing pursuit of gender equality. IHRAM Magazine proudly advocates for peaceful feminism through creativity that sparks dialogue and promotes unity. Through poetry, prose, and visual art, we delve into not only the challenges but also the triumphs of women worldwide, amplifying voices often marginalized and celebrating the resilience found in shared stories.
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Childhood Dreams and Aspirations
$10
A child’s experiences will shape their entire life, from their dreams to their aspirations, all the way into adulthood. The authors and artists featured in Childhood Dreams and Aspirations boldly share their firsthand accounts and reflect upon their youth experience: tales of childhood memories trans- formed into life lessons, challenges faced by teachers, war-affected youths, and advice to our future children.
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Indigenous Voices
$10
Throughout history and across the globe, Indigenous people have faced silenced voices, profound injustices, and forced displacement from their homes and communities. However, they continue to rise; sharing their stories with courage and pride and beautifully threading their ideas of spirituality and mythology into the innate fabric of their narratives. The authors and artists in Indigenous Voices urge us to challenge the past, draw insight from their themes, and carry their knowledge into our present and future.
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2023 and past Literary Magazines
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2023 Collected Works
$10
If art is a window, consider this magazine a direct line — a can and string mechanism — to a fellow human, a world away. The beauty of the International Human Rights Art Movement is that we are not just another soldier in the fight for global human equality; we are a peaceful space for human connection and reflection. We envision a world where artist activism is honored as a human right, and a source of social change.
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A Human Voice
$14.95
This books collects poems, short stories and essays, from authors in every continent (save Antarctica). In it, you will read about female perseverance through insurmountable odds, musings on masculinity and gender, out- cries against interpersonal prejudice and systemic racism, and elegies for people whose lives were taken unjustly through conflict and war. Each of the authors in this anthology contend with their identities in the context of their environments, providing readers with their unique perspectives on issues of human rights.
About IHRAM Literary Magazine
The IHRAM magazine was created with a simple goal: to celebrate and uplift up-and-coming authors from all over the world; each of the authors in this anthology contend with their identities in the context of their environments, providing their unique perspectives on issues of human rights.
Thank you for being part of a greater cause.
Award Nominees
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2024
“Instruction Manual: Sheets of Desire” by Miriam Calleja, Malta;
“The Hollow” by Pacella Chukwuma-Eke, Nigeria;
“To Bury A Curious Girl” by Amirah Al Wassif, Egypt;
“Savio” by Rigel Portales, Philippines;
“Nani’s Chai” by Navin Desai, United States;
“Fifteen” by Ana Reisens, Spain
2023
Edward Edmond Eduful, Ariana Lee, Mackenzie Duan, Alyza Taguilaso, Marcus Ugboduma and Simon Thaddeus Tsaga
2022
Joanna Cockerline, Alex Stein, AlfredoSalvatore Arcilesi, Luiza Louback, Joshua Effiong, Kristin W. Davis
2021
Laneikka Denne, Kalpna Singh-Chitnis, Sunday Obiageli, Esther Iyanuoluwa, Dean Gessie, Ashley Sophia
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2024
“Chamelemom” by Nathaniel Spencer-Cross;
“Green Door” by Kathleen Hellen;
“Quaking” by Kimberly W. Heiman
2023
Tyler Hein, Hec Lampert-Bates, Lena Petrović, Kashvi Ramani
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2024
“Red Red Roses” by Jadi Campbell, Germany and United States;
“Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) is Terrorism Against Women’s Bodies” by Nagasha Martina, Uganda
2023
Ian Stewart

