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Press Release
|
Apr 2, 2023

Maxine Hong Kingston Awarded Literature Medal

Maxine Hong Kingston is awarded the Academy’s Emerson-Thoreau medal, which was first given to Robert Frost in 1958 and has since been presented to other notable authors such as T.S. Eliot, Hannah Arendt, Norman Mailer, Toni Morrison, and Margaret Atwood.
Bulletin
|
Jun 3, 2022

Strengthening International Cooperative Reponses to Pandemics

Wars and conflicts in the twenty-first century are putting tremendous strain on the strategies traditionally used by humanitarian responders to help those in need, particularly strategies that deliver effective health responses. Recent civil wars not only account for a larger proportion of ongoing conflicts, but they have become more protracted with more actors with fragmented affiliations. Some of the world’s deadliest places are not formally war zones but areas of extreme political and criminal violence, such as in Venezuela, Mexico, Guatemala, and El Salvador. Providing humanitarian aid amid urban warfare calls for strategies that are different from the ones used in rural settings, where humanitarians have commonly operated in the past. Ruthless deliberate attacks on hospitals, schools, and civilians, as well as sexual and gender-based violence, form part of many of these twenty-first-century conflicts. Humanitarian health workers and health facilities are at growing risk of attack as the normative and legal framework that has traditionally regulated war has become less protective. Geopolitical rivalry and perceptions of a weakening commitment to humanitarian norms are further undermining traditional humanitarian approaches. At the same time, the risk of infectious diseases of pandemic potential intersects with conflict-related health and humanitarian needs, presenting additional challenges for humanitarians.
Desktop with computer, phone, mug, and a stack of books.
Academy Article
|
Nov 10, 2025

Social Workers, Compassion, and Artificial Intelligence

When Daniel Barron (Brigham and Women's Hospital) delivered a keynote address at an event with the National Association of Social Workers, he proposed ways to approach the use of AI to help social workers advance innovation without compromising compassion.
Press Release
|
Nov 30, 2009

Challenges to Business and Society in the 21st Century: The Way Forward

The events of the last decade, including the business failures of 2001-2002 and the economic crisis of 2008-2009, have called into question fundamental assumptions regarding the role of business and its relationship to global financial markets, governments, and society as a whole. The American Academy of Arts & Sciences will convene a working conference, cosponsored by the New York University Pollack Center for Law and Business, at the NYU Law School.
Bulletin
|
Aug 30, 2022

From the President

Russia’s unprovoked invasion of Ukraine has ushered in a new era of uncertainty and instability for the global order. What does the conflict mean for the
future of nuclear arms control? What role does corruption play in the erosion of constraints against aggression? And what will the conflict mean for democratic institutions, both abroad and here at home?
Data Forum
|
Aug 18, 2014

Toward Breadth in Baccalaureate Education

Those of us who teach undergraduates are familiar with the trend revealed in these data. Baccalaureate graduates typically have earned more course credits in the humanities (about 17% as defined here) than in STEM fields (about 13%). STEM majors earn fewer credits in the humanities than do students majoring in other areas; and students majoring in the humanities, business, social sciences, and education apparently earn no more than a required minimum of their credits in STEM courses.
Press Release
|
Apr 14, 2014

Carnegie Mellon and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences To Host “Mapping the Future of the Humanities and Social Sciences”

The American Academy’s “Heart of the Matter” Report Continues To Inspire Action
Woman Standing at Table
Press Release
|
Sep 22, 2023

Photojournal Features the Faces of the American Economy

A new photojournal produced by the Academy’s Commission on Reimagining Our Economy is part of their work to put the American people and their well-being at the center of discussions about the nation’s economy.
Press Release
|
Oct 17, 2023

New Report Sets Forth a Cross-Sector Approach to Climate Action

The report, Forging Climate Solutions: How to Accelerate Action Across America, was developed over a two-year period by a diverse commission of leaders sharing their expertise and priorities. Their report recommends how corporations, frontline communities, government, and environmental groups can work together to mobilize investments, build infrastructure, reduce emissions, and prepare for the impacts of climate change.
Bulletin
|
May 17, 2023

From the President

I hope this spring issue of the Bulletin finds you well and enjoying this season of renewal. Spring is always a special time at the Academy, particularly because it is when we elect a new class of Academy members. In April, we were pleased to welcome more than 260 innovative thinkers across a wide range of fields and professions. We look forward to celebrating them during Induction Weekend on September 29–30, 2023, when they will join the Class of 2022 in signing the Academy’s Book of Members.
Press Release
|
Nov 15, 2022

Exploring the Loss of Trust in Institutions and Experts – Fall 2022 Issue of Daedalus

The new issue of Daedalus, the journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, explores the loss of trust in experts and institutions: what are the causes and consequences of the loss of confidence and can they be reversed?
Portrait of Andrea Ghez with photo credit to Nobel Foundation.
Press Release
|
Feb 21, 2025

Andrea M. Ghez, Renowned Astrophysicist, Receives Rumford Prize

Andrea Ghez – a Nobel laureate and Professor of Physics and Astronomy at UCLA – is receiving the Rumford Prize, a storied science award given by the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She is being honored pioneering research on the supermassive black hole at the center of our galaxy that has revolutionized our understanding of the cosmos.

Press Release
|
Nov 2, 2015

Inaugural Distinguished Morton L. Mandel Annual Public Lecture at American Academy of Arts and Sciences Focuses on Access to U.S. Justice System

Experts in five locations—Berkeley, Cambridge, Chicago, New York, and Washington, D.C.—to lead discussions about legal justice on November 11 as part of the Academy’s inaugural Distinguished Morton L. Mandel Annual Public Lecture.
Press Release
|
Oct 23, 2008

Sandra Day O’Connor to Discuss Judicial Independence at Academy Program in New York, Nov. 6

Retired Supreme Court Associate Justice Sandra Day O’Connor will discuss current challenges faced by the federal and state courts in a climate of heightened partisanship, expensive election campaigns, and attacks on judicial independence.
Academy Article
|
Apr 10, 2025

A Statement from the Board of Directors - April 2025

A statement from the Board of Directors of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences, approved April 2025.
Bulletin
|
Jul 28, 2025

A Statement from the Academy’s Board of Directors

In the face of unprecedented hostility toward institutions dedicated to knowledge and the pursuit of truth, the Academy’s Board of Directors issued a statement reaffirming a commitment to the practice of democratic self-governance and the belief that a great nation invests in the arts and sciences while protecting the freedom that enables them to flourish.
Photograph of Author Margaret Atwood taken by Jean Malek
Press Release
|
Jan 29, 2020

Margaret Atwood to Receive Literature Medal

Margaret Atwood is receiving the Emerson-Thoreau Medal from the American Academy of Arts & Sciences for her distinguished achievement in the field of literature.
Bulletin
|
Dec 6, 2021

Report of the Chair of the Board of Directors

As I write this message, the specter of COVID-19 still hangs over our country and our world. The Academy’s activities have been entirely virtual throughout 2021 (and for most of 2020), and we have postponed in-person Induction ceremonies for two consecutive years. That was a particular disappointment because it is always wonderful to greet our newly elected class and deeply moving to watch each person cross the stage to sign The Book of Members, attesting to their membership in the Academy. We will do everything possible to recreate that experience when it is finally safe to gather.
Bulletin
|
Dec 10, 2025

A Statement from the Academy’s Board of Directors

In the face of unprecedented hostility toward institutions dedicated to knowledge and the pursuit of truth, the Academy’s Board of Directors issued a statement reaffirming a commitment to the practice of democratic self-governance and the belief that a great nation invests in the arts and sciences while protecting the freedom that enables them to flourish.
Bulletin
|
Jan 1, 2012

Two Systems in the Mind

Pagination

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