logo for print

Chloe Fox

Features Editor

chloe@thewire.media

Chloe Fox is a Washington, DC-based editor at The Wire. Previously, she was Executive Editor at Boston Review and an editor at HuffPost and The New Yorker. Her writing and reporting have appeared in The Boston Globe, Boston Magazine, The Hairpin, Honolulu Civil Beat, NewYorker.com, and Vogue.com.

In 2016, Fox was part of the team at Honolulu Civil Beat that won…

Read More

Chloe Fox is a Washington, DC-based editor at The Wire. Previously, she was Executive Editor at Boston Review and an editor at HuffPost and The New Yorker. Her writing and reporting have appeared in The Boston Globe, Boston Magazine, The Hairpin, Honolulu Civil Beat, NewYorker.com, and Vogue.com.

In 2016, Fox was part of the team at Honolulu Civil Beat that won the Best of the West’s first place prizes for immigration and border reporting and online presentation for a series on Micronesian immigration. In 2015, she won the Best of the West first place prize for editorial writing. As lead editor of HuffPost’s Hawaii office from 2014–2016, she won or was a finalist for several Excellence in Journalism awards from the Society of Professional Journalists, Hawaii chapter.

Fox studied English and History at Georgetown University and is a graduate of the Columbia Publishing Course at Columbia University’s School of Journalism.

Read Less

Articles

Building New China

Among the handful of truly global architecture firms, the New York-based Kohn Pedersen Fox has distinguished itself in China, designing some of the country’s most iconic buildings. Now, with 40 percent of its portfolio based in China, the firm is having to adapt to new...

The Quantum Edge

Quantum technologies have long sounded like they belong in the realm of science fiction. But in recent years, China, led by the brilliant physicist Pan Jianwei, has made huge quantum strides. Now, recent U.S. sanctions targeting Chinese quantum companies underscore the reality that these technologies...

Mr. China

Jerome A. Cohen pioneered the study of Chinese law in the United States. He met with Zhou Enlai, trained Chinese officials and helped American firms set up in China. Now, even at 90, he presses Beijing on its human rights record.