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CORE Score Map of the United States
In the News
|
Apr 25, 2024

CORE Score in the Wall Street Journal

A Wall Street Journal essay features the CORE Score, a metric created by the Academy's Commission on Reimagining the Economy to help move national focus from how the economy is doing to how Americans are doing. In this essay, the CORE Score helps explain how standard economic measures may indicate a good economy, while that's not what many Americans are feeling about their own wellbeing.
Source
Wall Street Journal
Interior of the U S House of Representatives
In the News
|
Jan 14, 2025

How to Fix America's Two-Party Problem

How to improve Congress? An opinion feature in the New York Times highlights bold ideas to make Congress better, including a link to the Academy's report, "The Case for Enlarging the House of Representatives.” The opinion piece and the report explain how expanding Congress would make it more representative, better serve voters, and keep the institution in line with the Founders’ vision.
Source
New York Times
Six colorful images of the Capitol building.
Press Release
|
Oct 9, 2025

Publication on Expanding Representation in Congress Issued

A new publication, which emerged from the Academy's Our Common Purpose work, proposes alternatives to the “winner-take-all” system used in most U.S. elections. The proposed alternatives have the potential to reduce partisan divides and virtually eliminate gerrymandering.
Bulletin
|
Feb 20, 2026

2025 Induction Ceremony

On October 11, 2025, the Academy inducted more than two hundred newly elected members during its annual Induction Ceremony. The program included brief remarks from five new members, each representing one of the Academy’s membership classes. Their talks addressed topics such as the transformative power of science, building trust in expertise in the age of biology, leading for breakthroughs, creating books that act as mirrors rather than windows, and the evolving impact of Title IX. The class speakers were Gregory H. Robinson (Class I: Mathematical and Physical Sciences), Ashish K. Jha (Class II: Biological Sciences), Brian Uzzi (Class III: Social and Behavioral Sciences), Jacqueline Woodson (Class IV: Humanities and Arts), and Christine Brennan (Class V: Leadership, Policy, and Communications). Edited versions of their remarks follow.
Woman engaging college students in an amphitheater seating arrangement.
Press Release
|
Jan 26, 2026

Helping Higher Education Leaders Prepare Students for Civic Life

The American Academy of Arts & Sciences has released a publication designed to help colleges and universities address a defining academic and societal challenge: preparing young people today with the knowledge, skills, and habits to sustain a healthy constitutional democracy. Preparing Students for Civic Life: A Guide for Higher Education Leaders includes strategies and case studies.
Press Release
|
Jan 6, 2016

New Dædalus Issue on “The Internet”

Essays offer insight about the Internet of the (near) future- and its implications
Three people load boxes onto a truck. Two are holding one box, while another person is reaching for the next box.
In the News
|
Nov 9, 2023

US Economy Scores Low on New Index Measuring Nation’s Well-Being

A Bloomberg article about the new metric of wellbeing issued by the Commission on Reimagining Our Economy - the CORE Score - considers how it might shed light on a a disconnect between how Americans have been feeling about the economy and standard indicators of economic activity.
Source
Bloomberg
Seamus Heaney at a turf bog in Bellaghy with his father's coat, hat and walking stick and additional shots in the Bellaghy bog, 1986.  Bobbie Hanvey, photographer.
Academy Article
|
Apr 13, 2021

Seamus Heaney - His Words, His Voice

Listen to Seamus Heaney read his poem “From the Frontier of Writing” along with commentary about its inspiration. This is an excerpt from a compete transcript and recording of his evening at the Academy.
Bulletin
|
Aug 14, 2018

How to Make Citizens

Eric Liu, cochair of the Academy's Commission on the Practice of Democratic Citizenship, speaks about how to prepare citizens in a democracy.
A photo of Maxine Hong Kingston, a person with brown skin and long wavy white hair. She wears a black dress under a multicolored scarf, and a necklace of white, green, and purple flowers. She looks to her right and smiles.
Bulletin
|
Sep 5, 2023

Honoring Maxine Hong Kingston

The Academy presented its Emerson-Thoreau Medal to Maxine Hong Kingston for her distinguished achievement in the field of literature. The award, named after Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau, was first given to Robert Frost in 1958 and has since been presented to several notable authors, including T.S. Eliot, Hannah Arendt, Norman Mailer, Toni Morrison, and Margaret Atwood.
Press Release
|
Sep 22, 2020

Witnessing Climate Change: Personal Narratives, Professional Expertise

The Fall 2020 issue of Dædalus on “Witnessing Climate Change” features sixteen personal narratives about climate-related work by professionals from multiple fields, backgrounds, and generations who feel a responsibility to share what they know and take action.
In the News
|
Sep 16, 2014

Prominent U.S. academics reprise plea for more basic research to fuel innovation

How long can U.S. science lobbyists keep repeating the same message—that boosting federal funding for basic research and removing barriers to innovation is a proven way to ensure economic prosperity—without tuning out their intended audience?
Source
Science
State House in Utah.
Academy Article
|
Jan 30, 2026

Democracy Initiatives at the State Level

States across the country took steps to advance and impede recommendations in the Academy's crosspartisan publication, Our Common Purpose: Reinventing American Democracy for the 21st Century. Learn more about which issues - including civics education, redistricting commissions, and voting regulations - were addressed and where.
Members of the Commission on Accelerating Climate Action stand in a grassy park in Miami’s Little River neighborhood while on a walking tour led by staff at the Miami-Dade County Office of Resilience.
Bulletin
|
Jul 31, 2024

Climate Action Has Accelerated but There Is More Work to Be Done

The conversation about climate change has evolved dramatically over the past three years. Since the Academy’s Board of Directors issued a public statement on climate change and the Academy’s Commission on Accelerating Climate Action began, public opinion and legislative measures have shifted toward more significant climate solutions.
Bulletin
|
Jul 31, 2024

Honoring Kwame Anthony Appiah

On April 18, 2024, Kwame Anthony Appiah received the Academy’s Don M. Randel Award for Humanistic Studies. Established in 1975 as the Award for Humanistic Studies and renamed in 2017 in honor of musicologist Don M. Randel, the award recognizes outstanding contributions to humanistic scholarship. The award ceremony included opening remarks from Academy President David W. Oxtoby, a reading of the prize citation by Henry Louis Gates, Jr., acceptance remarks from Professor Appiah, and a conversation between Professor Appiah and journalist Margaret Sullivan. An edited transcript of the program follows.
Bulletin
|
Aug 22, 2017

From the President

Bulletin
|
May 1, 2020

Writing into the Sunset

At an Academy event held in Seattle, Washington, author Annie Proulx described some surprising places her research has led: from accusations of plagiarism against Alfred, Lord Tennyson to obsessive lepidopterists and images of long-lost swamplands. Following her opening remarks, she joined Shawn Wong, professor of English, in conversation.
Bulletin
|
Dec 1, 2023

Deceased Members

Deceased Members
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.
Bulletin
|
Jul 31, 2024

From the Archives

Among the founding documents in the Academy Archives is a large bound volume, in three parts, of manuscript minutes, dating back to the Academy’s first meeting in May 1780. In addition to attendance rolls and descriptions of business trans­acted at these meetings, the volume contains other documents that chronicle the establishment of the organization’s rules, regulations, and practices.

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