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Bulletin
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Apr 24, 2026

Generative AI Is Terrific, But Is It Really Legal?

The Academy’s Berkeley Committee hosted a panel discussion on generative AI (GenAI) that offered a technical overview of the technology and explored the legal and economic issues raised by the growing number of lawsuits challenging the legality of GenAI. The panel included Jennifer Chayes, Dean of the UC Berkeley College of Computing, Data Science, and Society; Pamela Samuelson, Professor of Law at UC Berkeley School of Law; and Abhishek Nagaraj, economist and Associate Professor at the Berkeley Haas School of Business. Goodwin Liu, Chair of the Academy’s Board of Directors, delivered welcome remarks. An edited transcript of the panelists’ presentations and discussion follows.
Press Release
|
Feb 4, 2016

New American Academy of Arts and Sciences Publication Examines Challenges of and Opportunities in Funding Model for Public Research Universities

Tuition is the principal revenue source for many of these institutions; Teaching and research remain the two top expenditures.
Bulletin
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Jul 31, 2024

Honoring Haifan Lin with the Francis Amory Prize

On March 26, 2024, stem cell biologist Haifan Lin received the Francis Amory Prize of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. First awarded in 1940, the Amory Prize recognizes significant scientific advances in reproductive biology and medical care. The award ceremony included remarks by Yale University President Peter Salovey and Academy President David W. Oxtoby, a reading of the Amory Prize citation by Dean of the Yale School of Medicine Nancy J. Brown, and a presentation by Professor Lin. An edited version of the remarks and presentation follows.
Bulletin
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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
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Mar 13, 2015

The Academy at Work: Research Projects and Studies

Bulletin
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Aug 14, 2018

Songs of Love and Death: I madrigali a cinque voci (Venice, 1542) by Cipriano de Rore (1515/16–1565)

In 2015, the American Musicological Society gave the Noah Greenberg Award to musicologist Jessie Ann Owens and the vocal ensemble Blue Heron, directed by Scott Metcalfe, for their project to produce the world premiere recording of Cipriano de Rore’s landmark I madrigali a cinque voci (Venice, 1542). On May 3, 2018, Owens spoke at the Academy about Cipriano’s music; following her presentation, Blue Heron performed a selection of madrigals drawn from his 1542 publication.
Image of a white brain against a blue computer circuit board.
Academy Article
|
Mar 31, 2026

A Conversation at the Intersection of AI and Human Memory

An Academy event explored the interplay between artificial intelligence and human memory to understand the threats and opportunities that emerge when they interact. How does machine learning shape our perception of history, identity, and truth?
Bulletin
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Jan 1, 2000

Rosanna Warren and Galway Kinnell

Bulletin
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Feb 20, 2026

Induction 2025: Opening Celebration

Induction Weekend 2025 began with an Opening Celebration that featured the announcement of the new Legacy Recognition Honorees with a special message from John Legend, followed by a conversation between David M. Rubenstein, Co-Founder and Co-Chairman of The Carlyle Group, and Kenny Leon, Tony Award–winning stage and television director and new member of the Academy. An edited version of their conversation follows.
Bulletin
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Mar 1, 2013

Cyber-Archaeology and World Cultural Heritage: Insights from the Holy Land

On January 25, 2013,Thomas Levy described “cyber-archaeology” and the important role it plays in helping to promote excellence in the humanities and social sciences.
Bulletin
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Jun 3, 2022

A Conversation with James Manyika on “AI & Society”

The Spring 2022 issue of Dædalus on “AI & Society,” guest edited by Academy member James Manyika, explores the many facets of AI: its technology, its potential futures, its effects on labor and the economy, its relationship with inequalities, its role in law and governance, its challenges to national security, and what it says about us as humans. What follows are a few additional remarks and insight from the volume’s guest editor on the collection.
Bulletin
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Feb 12, 2014

Projects in Science and Technology Policy; Security and Energy; and Humanities, Education, and Social Policy

Bulletin
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Jan 1, 2000

Lucille Clifton

In the News
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Jul 28, 2021

I Love the Public Humanities, But...

Instituted incautiously, the public humanities can threaten faculty speech and encourage cash-chasing. Feisal G. Mohamed discusses how getting it right will require structural change on the American campus — and some institutional investment in humanities departments.
Source
The Chronicle of Higher Education
Bulletin
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Jul 31, 2024

Dædalus Explores Advances & Challenges in International Higher Education

While U.S. colleges struggle against broad disinvestment, institutions of higher education in many parts of the world have imagined ambitious new models of twenty-first-century education. From world-class public research universities to online and binational start-ups, the landscape of global higher education is shaped by ongoing experimentation and change. What have these approaches taught us? And what lessons can we apply to institutions in the United States?
Bulletin
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Feb 19, 2021

A Conversation with Astronaut Jessica Meir

NASA astronaut Jessica Meir made history in October 2019 when she participated in the first all-female spacewalk. After 205 days in the isolation of space, she returned to a planet experiencing its own form of isolation: the global COVID-19 pandemic. As an astronaut and a marine biologist, Dr. Meir’s research into the impact of extreme environments has brought her to the depths of the Antarctic and the heights of space. At a virtual program, hosted by the Academy’s San Diego Program Committee, Dr. Meir described her research and her experiences in space and participated in a conversation with Brian Keating (University of California San Diego) about the perspectives that her work provides about our world.
Press Release
|
May 12, 2016

American Academy of Arts and Sciences Member Jeannette Wing Testifies Before Congress on U.S. Science and Technology Enterprise

Microsoft Research Corporate VP Wing calls for implementation of Academy recommendations for long-term sustainability of U.S. science & engineering research enterprise
In the News
|
Jul 11, 2016

Flagships Must Create New Models to Preserve the Public Good

Source
The Chronicle of Higher Education
In the News
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Apr 15, 2016

Public Research Universities’ Shifting Funding Models

Source
Nonprofit Quarterly
Press Release
|
Dec 22, 2016

Toni Morrison Receives the 2016 Emerson-Thoreau Medal from the American Academy of Arts and Sciences

The American Academy of Arts & Sciences named Toni Morrison as the recipient of the 2016 Emerson-Thoreau Medal for her distinguished achievement in the field of literature. Established in 1958, the medal is awarded to an individual for his or her total literary achievement rather than for a specific work.

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