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In the News
|
Feb 20, 2017

How governments and companies can prevent the next insider attack

In today’s high-tech and hyperconnected world, threats from insiders go far beyond leakers and lone-wolf shooters. How can we better protect against the enemy within, no matter what it is that needs to be protected?
Source
The Conversation
Press Release
|
Jan 13, 2022

Pioneering Astrophysicist Charles L. Bennett Receives Rumford Prize

​​​​​​​The Rumford Prize – a storied science award presented by the American Academy of Arts & Sciences – has been given to astrophysicist and experimental cosmologist Charles L. Bennett.
Photograph of Anthony Appiah
Press Release
|
Jan 31, 2024

Anthony Appiah to Receive Humanities Award

The American Academy of Arts & Sciences has named Kwame Anthony Appiah - author, philosopher, and public intellectual - the recipient of the Academy's award for outstanding contributions to humanistic scholarship.
Woman in a Red Apron Wiping Down a Restaurant Table
Bulletin
|
Feb 20, 2024

Reimagining Our Economy

As the United States approaches the 2024 presidential election, several journalists and commentators have been puzzled by one question: “Why do Americans seem so unhappy with an economy that appears to be doing so well?” Polls are influenced by many factors, but recent results show how pessimistic many Americans feel about the economy. And yet, judged by traditional economic metrics like the GDP or the Dow Jones, the economy is doing well. How do we explain this paradox?
Redistricting Maps Discussion in Greenville NC from Flickr / public domain.
Academy Article
|
Apr 29, 2025

State Legislative Update: Independent Citizen-Redistricting Commissions

An update on state legislative and regulatory activities concerning independent citizen-redistricting commissions.
Bulletin
|
Aug 7, 2020

A New Profile of Humanities Departments

Since 2013, when the American Academy’s Humanities Commission issued The Heart of the Matter report, there has been considerable media discussion about declining humanities majors, an anemic academic job market, and general perceptions of a field in crisis. A new study by the Humanities Indicators, completed on the eve of the COVID-19 crisis, provides a fresh look at these questions.
Bulletin
|
Mar 1, 2012

The Future of the American Military

The place of the military in the public consciousness has changed dramatically over time. In a Gallup poll from 2011 that measured the public’s confidence in sixteen major institutions, the military ranked higher than any other institution, with 78 percent of respondents stating their respect for and confidence in the armed forces. On December 7, 2011 – the seventieth anniversary of the attack on Pearl Harbor – the Academy convened a panel of scholars at Stanford University to discuss the military and international relations.
Bulletin
|
Feb 27, 2017

Why is There a Literature in the Latin Language?

Academy member Denis Feeney has spent the last few years trying to understand why the Romans developed a literature in their Latin language, when the balance of historical probability was against this happening.
Bulletin
|
Aug 22, 2016

What Evidence Should We Trust?

When forced to decide between a career in biochemistry or psychology in the spring of 1950, Jerome Kagan chose the latter because of a gnawing puzzlement provoked by the observation that apparently sane people living in the same community held different beliefs about love, honesty, and whom was entitled to respect and whom to scorn.
Academy Article
|
Nov 21, 2022

North Korea’s Nuclear Threats: A Congressional Briefing

North Korea has made steady progress on nuclear and missile technologies, but there has been little public awareness or policy-making attention due to other pressing global issues. To highlight the significance of North Korea's continued actions, the Academy convened a Congressional briefing with expert panelists analyzing the situation with regard to rhetoric, Russia's invasion of Ukraine, and tense diplomatic relations.
Bulletin
|
Jan 1, 2013

2012 Induction Ceremony Class Speakers

On October 6, 2012, the American Academy inducted its 232nd class of Fellows and Foreign Honorary Members at a ceremony held in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The ceremony featured historical readings by Daniel Day-Lewis, new member Bonnie Berger, and Tom Leighton. It also included presentations by five new members: Steven H. Strogatz, Margaret J. McFall-Ngai, Maureen E. Mahoney, David Blight, and Penny Pritzker. The ceremony concluded with a memorable performance by Thomas Hampson (baritone).
Bulletin
|
Aug 20, 2015

Restoring the Foundation: Reviving the U.S. Science, Engineering, and Technology Enterprise

Rice University’s Baker Institute for Public Policy hosted a Civic Scientist Lecture on the Academy's recent report.
Bulletin
|
Apr 1, 2014

Dædalus Examines “Growing Pains in a Rising China”

Bulletin
|
Aug 22, 2017

Noteworthy

Bulletin
|
Jun 1, 2015

Mr g–The Story of Creation as Told by God

The Academy’s 2017th Stated Meeting on February 11, 2015, featured members of the Catalyst Collaborative@MIT performing a staged reading of Mr g, a novel by Alan Lightman. Mr g is the story of creation as narrated by God (Mr g). In it, Mr g’s uncle Deva and aunt Penelope give him advice as he sets about creating the universe; he also spars with a Satan-like character about various ethical and philosophical issues raised by his creation, especially when intelligent life emerges.
Bulletin
|
May 20, 2019

Remembrance

It is with sadness that the Academy notes the passing of the following Members.*
Press Release
|
Oct 21, 2013

Secretary of Smithsonian Institution to Speak at University of West Georgia

The University of West Georgia College of Arts and Humanities is serving as the statewide host site for discussion on a national report titled “The Heart of the Matter: the Humanities and Social Sciences” conducted by the American Academy of Arts & Sciences Commission on the Humanities and Social Sciences.
Bulletin
|
May 3, 2021

New Dædalus Issue Explores Immigration, Nativism & Race

Dysfunctional immigration policies implemented in recent decades have accelerated growth of the Latino population and racialized its members around the trope of illegality. Until 2016, the cultivation of White resentment relied on a dog-whistle politics of racially coded symbolic language, but with the election of Donald Trump, White nationalist sentiments became explicit.
Bulletin
|
Feb 20, 2024

Remembrance: Arthur Gelb

Arthur Gelb, a prominent member of the American Academy since 2000, died on November 8, 2023. He served as the Chairman of the Academy’s Investment Committee and as a member of the Academy Trust. For many Academy Induction ceremonies his role was to introduce the Class I speaker (in the mathematical and physical sciences).
In the News
|
Feb 6, 2019

Foreign language classes becoming more scarce

Citing Academy report "America's Languages," Kathleen Stein-Smith explores the increasing scarcity of foreign language classes and teachers.
Source
The Conversation

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