Elijah Wolfson
Quick Facts
Biography
Elijah Wolfson is an American writer and editor. He is the son of noted academic Elliot Wolfson.
Wolfson was born and raised in Ridgewood, New Jersey and Manhattan, New York. He studied rhetoric and creative writing at the University of California, Berkeley.
Wolfson began his career as a Senior Editor at Newsweek, where he covered science, health, technology and culture. He's contributed to The Atlantic, Al Jazeera America,Vice, and the Huffington Post, and has appeared on MSNBC, BBC World News, NPR and other media outlets.
In 2013, Wolfson was awarded a Langeloth Health Journalism Fellows by the John Jay College Center on Media, Crime, and Justice. In 2015, he was awarded an International Reporting Project Fellowship, and covered the Nepal Earthquake of 2015 from the ground. In 2015, Wolfson was also awarded the Metcalf Institute Fellowship and the 2015 Population Institute Global Media Award for his reporting on the relationship between climate change and access to family planning in developing countries.
In 2016, his Newsweek cover story investigated allegations of child abuse at Jewish Chabad school system of New York. The story sparked protests.
Wolfson now serves as Deputy Editor at Quartz.