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Bulletin
|
May 20, 2025

The Academic Humanities Today: Findings from a New National Survey

Few need to be told that the academic humanities have been beset by challenges over the past fifteen years, but the evidence tends to be scattered. To provide a clearer picture of the state of the field, the Academy’s Humanities Indicators project recently released the results from a new national survey of humanities departments in fourteen humanities and humanities-adjacent disciplines, the fourth such survey since 2008. Drawing on responses from more than two thousand department chairs, the report demonstrates both the challenges the field experiences today and the resilience of many departments in the face of those difficulties.
Bulletin
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Jan 1, 2012

Induction 2011

On October 1, 2011, the American Academy inducted its 231st class of Fellows and Foreign Honorary Members at a ceremony held in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The ceremony included presentations by five new members: Frances Hamilton Arnold, David Conrad Page, Sir Adam Roberts, Annette Gordon-Reed, and William I. Miller.
Bulletin
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Jan 1, 2012

Academy Projects

Bulletin
|
Dec 10, 2025

The Humanities, Arts & Culture

The humanities, arts, and culture are woven through virtually every Academy program, in which artists and humanists add interdisciplinary breadth to projects in science, democracy, and security. However, the Academy also undertakes projects that put humanities, arts, and culture at the forefront–tracking and reporting data on the health of the sector through the Humanities Indicators, and working with leaders in the field to articulate the needs of the sector and their importance to a vital and thriving nation.
Press Release
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Jan 8, 2003

American Academy's Humanities Indicators Project Receives Hewlett Foundation Grant

The American Academy of Arts and Sciences has received a $750,000 grant from The William and Flora Hewlett Foundation to advance the Academy's work on statistical indicators for the humanities.
Press Release
|
Feb 4, 2002

Academy Fellows discuss causes and consequences of September 11 and its aftermath: Civil Liberties and National Security after September 11

Bulletin
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Mar 1, 2023

2022 Induction Ceremony

The importance of public-private partnership; the assault on science and scientists; the attacks on knowledge, ideas, education, and democracy; the history of the American West and the American military; and the power of stories to teach, build bridges, and bring about social change – the class speakers at the Induction Ceremony for members elected in 2020 and 2021 addressed major issues facing the world today, with calls to action and calls for change. The ceremony featured presentations from engineer Lisa T. Su; neurosurgeon, medical reporter, and writer Sanjay Gupta; scholar and writer on civil rights and critical race theory Kimberlé W. Crenshaw; historian Patricia Limerick; and labor union activist Mary Kay Henry. An edited version of their presentations follows.
In the News
|
May 15, 2022

Remaining monolingual is a surefire way for America to fall behind

The U.S. must make competence in foreign languages an urgent economic, national security, and educational priority. Glenn Altschuler and David Wippman argue for increased language instruction, citing the Academy report on America’s Languages.
Source
The Hill
Bulletin
|
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
|
Jun 11, 2020

A Plan to Reinvent American Democracy for the 21st Century: Responding to a Nation in Crisis

A bipartisan commission issues 31 recommendations to strengthen America’s institutions and civic culture to help a nation in crisis emerge with a stronger democracy.
Shield of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences featuring Minerva with shield.
Press Release
|
Apr 22, 2026

New Members Elected in 2026: Fitting Recognition of America's 250th

Building on America’s 250-year-old commitment to knowledge, the American Academy of Arts & Sciences announces the leaders in academia, the arts, industry, journalism, philanthropy, policy, research, and science elected in 2026.

Bulletin
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Jul 28, 2025

Forging New Relationships Between Cultural Spaces and Their Communities

Recent surveys administered by the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, American Alliance for Museums, Americans for the Arts, and the National Endowment for the Arts show that U.S. cultural institutions enjoy strong public approval. However, despite that high regard, studies reveal a decline in engagement with many of these institutions, particularly since the pandemic.
Supreme Court
In the News
|
Jul 2, 2019

Why civil courts’ larger problems can’t be simplified away

What if, by simplifying the courts — and expecting low-income people without representation to make productive use of the do-it-yourself tools available to them — the courts are inadvertently hindering access to justice? Lawyers Colleen Shanahan and Anna Carpenter make the argument in their Daedalus essay on why "Simplified Courts Can’t Solve Inequality."
Source
Thomson Reuters
More than two dozen countries make voting a civic duty akin to jury duty. CHIP SOMODEVILLA/GETTY
In the News
|
Jan 8, 2022

How to boost voter turnout to nearly 100 percent

Saving democracy might require mandatory voting — and Massachusetts can lead the way. Miles Rapoport, of the Academy's Commission on the Practice of Democratic Citizenship, and Alex Keyssar make the case for universal voting.
Source
The Boston Globe
Bulletin
|
May 3, 2018

From the President

In 2015, the Academy established The Exploratory Fund to support Members who wish to look over the horizon for issues and opportunities not well understood, to think of problems in a fresh way, and to search for connections between research and policy that advance the common good.
Bulletin
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Feb 27, 2017

Induction Ceremony 2016: Presentations by New Members

The American Academy inducted its 236th class of members at a ceremony that included presentations by five new members: Terry A. Plank, Jay D Keasling, Andrea Louise Campbell, Theaster Gates, Jr., and Walter Isaacson.
Bulletin
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Mar 8, 2019

The Study of African American Women’s Writing: Pasts & Futures

On September 6, 2018, at Emory University, the American Academy hosted a Morton L. Mandel Public Lecture on “The Study of African American Women’s Writing: Pasts & Futures.” The program, which included a welcome from Dwight A. McBride, served as the 2069th Stated Meeting of the American Academy. Michelle M. Wright introduced the evening’s speakers – Frances Smith Foster, Beverly Guy-Sheftall, and Pellom McDaniels III – and moderated the discussion.
In the News
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Mar 22, 2019

The Humanities and the Future

Academy member Abraham Loeb connects the future of technological innovation to the lessons of the humanities, citing Academy report "The Heart of the Matter."
Source
Scientific American
In the News
|
Aug 2, 2021

Advice to Leaders on Strengthening Civic Culture & Trust in Government

This summer, the National Academy of Public Administration and the American Academy of Arts & Sciences held panel discussions on Public Governance and Civic Engagement. From these conversations emerged clear recommendations for policymakers to build a stronger civic culture and increase trust in government.
Source
Federalism.US
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?

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