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Press Release
|
May 18, 2009

Nuclear Fuel Cycle of the Future Discussed at Argonne

On May 12 and 13, the Academy and Argonne National Laboratory hosted a workshop, “Toward a New Nuclear Regime: The Fuel Cycle of the Future.” International representation from developed and emerging nuclear countries, as well as regional and international organizations, included senior policy officials, eminent scientists and educators, and leaders of the nuclear industry.
Bulletin
|
Mar 1, 2001

Theater and Society: The Poison Tree

Academy members and guests attended a matinee performance of Robert Glaudini's The Poison Tree, in its world premiere at the Mark Taper Forum. After the show, they adjourned to the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion for dinner and the Stated Meeting, presided over by Western Center Cochair Jack W. Peltason.
In the News
|
Aug 12, 2015

Learning the Language: American Academy to Launch National Study on Foreign Language Learning

Source
Education Week
Three speakers in discussion about rebuilding trust in science.
Academy Article
|
Oct 23, 2024

The Essential Work of Rebuilding Trust in Science

The Academy hosted a multi-faceted conversation about the interconnectedness of polarization, institutions, and the public’s trust in science. The panelists shared views from academic, journalistic, and institutional perspectives about how the public trust has been eroded and how the trust can be restored.
Bulletin
|
Feb 20, 2026

From the Archives

In March 1945, Mrs. Laura M. Agassiz sent the Academy three portraits of members of the Agassiz family: her late husband, Maximilian (1866–1941); his father, Alexander (1835–1910; elected to the Academy in 1862); and his grandfather, Louis (1807–1873; elected a Foreign Honorary Member in 1846). Both elder Agassizes were active members of the Academy; Alexander served as president from 1894–1903. The Academy accessioned the portraits into its collections and put them on display in the Newbury Street headquarters, which the Agassiz family helped to build.
Bulletin
|
Dec 9, 2020

Report of the Chair of the Board of Directors

This has been an extraordinary year, marked by a historic pandemic, bitter political strife, and unsettling civil unrest, and capped by a presidential election unlike any before. The new administration faces daunting challenges—uniting a deeply divided country, marshaling science and public health expertise to quell the coronavirus pandemic, improving relationships with international allies, striving for racial equity, addressing climate change, and making our economy work for all citizens. Members of the American Academy will play important roles in these efforts, both through public service and through the work of our organization. I believe we are as relevant and important now as at any other mo­ment over the past two hundred and forty years.
Bulletin
|
May 20, 2025

The Member Guide

The Member Guide is a new publication this year developed to illuminate ways in which members can connect to one another and the Academy. This resource offers an overview of Academy activities, projects, and processes with highlights throughout to indicate how members can get involved and who to contact with questions.
Press Release
|
Dec 14, 2016

Joan Wallach Scott Receives the 2016 Talcott Parsons Prize from the American Academy of Arts and Sciences

The American Academy of Arts and Sciences has named Joan Wallach Scott as the recipient of the 2016 Talcott Parsons Prize for her distinguished contributions to the social sciences. This award will be presented to Professor Scott, a member of the Academy, on April 6, 2017, at the House of the Academy in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
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
In the News
|
Jan 31, 2021

No More Normal: Our Common Purpose

National Public Radio affiliate KUNM gathered a panel of citizens to discuss and debate the recommendations in Our Common Purpose, the final report of the Academy’s Commission on the Practice of Democratic Citizenship.
Source
KUNM
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.
Press Release
|
Apr 3, 2009

Schekman to Brief CDC Institute on ARISE Findings

Randy Schekman will present the recommendations of the ARISE report to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's (CDC) National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH).
Press Release
|
Feb 24, 2012

White House’s online ‘Bill of Rights’ reflects American Academy’s work on Internet security

Key recommendations in the fall 2011 issue of the Academy’s journal, Daedalus, “Protecting the Internet as a Public Commons,” are reflected in the White House’s newly released “Privacy Bill of Rights,” for online consumers.
Press Release
|
Dec 18, 2020

Lehmann and Schüpbach Awarded Amory Prize

Ruth Lehmann and Gertrud M. Schüpbach have been awarded the 2020 Francis Amory Prize in Reproductive Medicine and Reproductive Physiology by the Academy. The discoveries made by Lehmann, a cell biologist, and Schüpbach, a geneticist, have advanced their own fields and contributed to knowledge and progress in DNA repair, embryonic development, RNA regulation, stem cell research, and other areas.
Bulletin
|
Jul 28, 2025

Select Upcoming Events

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In the News
|
May 23, 2022

Connecting Communities: Libraries as Invisible Infrastructure

Public libraries and their grounded, portable and invisible civic infrastructure give us another, better way to relate to ourselves and to each other — not only as consumers, but as citizens.
Source
NLC - National League of Cities
In the News
|
Jun 11, 2024

Environmental Impact of War and Military Motivations for Peace

The environmental costs of war and how to minimize them were a focus of an Academy seminar, writes participant Saleem H. Ali in Forbes. In his article, Ali explores meeting themes including the costs of military greenhouse gas emissions, the "greening of warfare," the costs and impact of post-conflict reconstruction, and the ways military forces could engage in environmental remediation.
Source
Forbes
Bulletin
|
Mar 13, 2015

From the President

Press Release
|
Nov 12, 2014

Commission on the Humanities and Social Sciences: The Academy receives the 2014 Arts & Sciences Advocacy Award from the Council of Colleges of Arts & Sciences

The Council of Colleges of Arts and Sciences (CCAS) presented to the American Academy the 2014 Arts & Sciences Advocacy Award for issuing "The Heart of the Matter" and for its long-standing commitment to recognizing outstanding scholars and for working to address critical challenges facing our global society.
Press Release
|
Oct 20, 2009

Academy Members Win 2009 Nobel Prize

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