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Press Release
|
Dec 1, 2009

Academy Program Considers How Corporate America Can Help Solve Social Challenges in the Post-Crisis Economy

The recent financial crisis has exposed serious flaws in the relationship between corporate America and the larger society, but it has also provided an extraordinary opportunity to reexamine and rebuild that relationship for the new century. On November 30, 2009, Rajat K. Gupta and Roger W. Ferguson, Jr. discussed these issues at an American Academy of Arts & Sciences event in New York City entitled “Challenges to Business and Society in the 21st Century: The Way Forward.”
Picture of Howard Mumford Jones from the cover of "History and Relevance"
Archives Highlight

Howard Mumford Jones - An Academy President's Vision and Plan

Howard Mumford Jones was president of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences from 1944 to 1951. He was instrumental in transforming the Academy into a national organization dedicated to the interdisciplinary analysis of broad-scale intellectual issues.
Archives Highlight

Joseph Pope’s Orrery

On November 22, 1788, the General Court of Massachusetts approved the Academy’s petition to hold a public lottery. Proceeds would go toward the purchase of a unique, grand model of the solar system for Harvard College.
Bulletin
|
Sep 5, 2023

From the Archives

On May 5–6, 1956, the Academy hosted a conference on “Science and the Modern World View–Toward a Common Understanding of the Sciences and the Humanities.” The conference, funded by the National Science Foundation, was held in honor of physicist Percy Williams Bridgman and mathematician and physicist Philipp G. Frank. At their request, the meeting was not a celebration of their individual work. Rather, it highlighted the discipline of the philosophy of science, which they both advanced. Specifically, the conference examined the history of a scientific worldview and its intersection with the humanities in the mid-twentieth century.
Academy Article
|
Jan 31, 2023

Book Launch with CSIS for The Fragile Balance of Terror: Deterrence in the Nuclear Age

The Academy and the Center for Strategic and International Studies launched a new book -- The Fragile Balance of Terror: Deterrence in the Nuclear Age -- at a cohosted event in Washington D.C. featuring one of the volume's editors and multiple authors.
Experimental telephone
Archives Highlight

Bell Demonstrates Telephone

Alexander Graham Bell visited the Academy and demonstrated his invention of the telephone before members twice during 1876 in May and October...
Press Release
|
Jun 19, 2013

George Lucas, John Lithgow, Yo-Yo Ma, Ken Burns and others Examine Life without Art, Music, Literature, and History in New Film

A distinguished group of artists and leaders from all fields demonstrate the need for the humanities and social sciences to America’s future in a new film, "The Heart of the Matter," released today.
Archives Highlight

First Volume of Memoirs Published

The Academy issued its first volume of papers in 1786.
In the News
|
Dec 12, 2019

The Process Due: A Multidisciplinary Examination of the Devastating and Persistent Crisis in Legal Services

"Access to Justice," the Fall 2019 issue of Daedalus, is only the first of several efforts sponsored by the Academy to gather information about the national need for improved legal access, study innovations piloted around the country to fill this need, and advance a set of clear, national recommendations for closing the justice gap.
Source
Judicature
Press Release
|
Dec 15, 2016

New Report Suggests that the Nation’s Capacity in Languages Other than English Has Diminished, Despite Need

The American Academy of Arts and Sciences has released a report that suggests a diminishing share of U.S. residents speak languages other than English, a trend that could have important consequences for business, international affairs, and intellectual exchange.
U.S. Capitol with scaffolding
In the News
|
Sep 30, 2021

A Second Look at the Administrative State: Deconstruction as Reassessment

Jotwell examines Aaron Nielson’s Dædalus essay, “Deconstruction (Not Destruction),” which reinterprets deconstruction in the “more technical sense of examining the administrative state to identify where theory and reality diverge and what can be done to fix it.”
Source
Jotwell
Academy Article
|
Oct 4, 2023

An Announcement from David Oxtoby

In October 2023, Academy President David Oxtoby announced his decision to step down as president of the Academy in June 2024, after more than five years of service.
Bulletin
|
Dec 5, 2022

The American Academy’s Core Values

Founded in 1780, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences honors excellence and convenes leaders from every field of human endeavor to examine new ideas, address issues of importance to the nation and the world, and work together “to cultivate every art and science which may tend to advance the interest, honor, dignity, and happiness of a free, independent, and virtuous people.”
In the News
|
Feb 28, 2023

The House was Supposed to Grow with the Population. It didn’t. Let’s fix that.

Danielle Allen, cochair of the Commission on the Practice of Democratic Citizenship, makes the case for enlarging the U.S. House of Representatives. The first recommendation of Our Common Purpose calls for enlarging the House of Representatives.
Source
Washington Post
Bulletin
|
Jun 1, 2010

Do Scientists Understand the Public? An Essay

This essay by Chris Mooney cogently distills off-the-record workshops for experts from the scientific community and representatives of the public to explore how scientists currently understand their obligation to the broader social and cultural contexts in which their work is received, and to examine ways to improve engagement between the scientific and public communities.
Bulletin
|
Feb 12, 2014

A View of the Visiting Scholars

Bulletin
|
Feb 27, 2025

2024 Induction Ceremony

The class speakers at the Induction Ceremony explored several themes, including the value of curiosity and the unexpected; strategies to prevent scientific failures with harmful consequences; the role of the social sciences in addressing the urgent challenges of today; the processes of transformation and translation; and how openness fosters innovative and sustainable problem-solving. The ceremony featured presentations from theoretical astrophysicist Charles F. Gammie, research ecologist Helene Muller-Landau, lawyer and legal scholar Daniel E. Ho, writer and translator Jhumpa Lahiri, and economist and nonprofit leader Cecilia A. Conrad. 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
|
Dec 6, 2021

Board of Directors Statement on Climate Change

The American Academy of Arts and Sciences was founded in 1780, during the American Revolution, to provide guidance to a young nation. Throughout its 241-year history, the Academy’s leadership has seldom issued organizational statements, preferring to have its projects, studies, publications, and convenings present the best available thinking about the topics in question. However, when a situation arises – like climate change – that profoundly threatens the world, a call to action from the Academy’s Board of Directors is appropriate.
Bulletin
|
Aug 1, 2014

At Berkeley, a new documentary by Frederick Wiseman

On March 12, 2014, the Academy hosted a program at its 2006th Stated Meeting about “At Berkeley,” a new documentary by Frederick Wiseman. The program included screened selections from the film, followed by a panel discussion with filmmaker Frederick Wiseman, Robert J. Birgeneau, George W. Breslauer, and Mark S. Schlissel.

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