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Bulletin
|
Jul 31, 2024

Understanding Implicit Bias and How to Combat It

On April 30, 2024, the Academy hosted a virtual event that featured four contributors to the Dædalus volume on “Understanding Implicit Bias: Insights & Innovations”—guest editors Goodwin Liu (California Supreme Court) and Camara Phyllis Jones (King’s College London) and authors Jennifer Eberhardt (Stanford University) and Frank Dobbin (Harvard University)—who discussed some of the strategies and solutions to understand and combat implicit bias. The program included welcoming remarks from Academy President David W. Oxtoby. An edited transcript of the event follows.
Bulletin
|
Mar 24, 2016

Exploding Stars and the Accelerating Universe

Alexei V. Filippenko discusses supernovae and the accelerating expansion of the universe.
Bulletin
|
Mar 13, 2015

The Academy at Work: Research Projects and Studies

Bulletin
|
Aug 30, 2022

Global Instability and Nuclear Arms Control

By Poul Erik Christiansen, former Raymond Frankel Nuclear Security Policy Fellow at the Academy
Bulletin
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Feb 10, 2022

Reckoning with Organizational History

Over the last few years, organizations across the United States – corporations, universities, and nonprofits like the American Academy – have begun to reflect on their ties to slavery, Native genocide, and other troubling elements of American history. The Academy’s virtual event on “Reckoning with Organizational History” explored why historical self-examination matters and what can be gained from these studies.
Bulletin
|
May 3, 2021

Steps Toward International Climate Governance

The Academy’s New Haven Program Committee, in partnership with Yale University’s MacMillan Center, hosted a conversation on national and international policies for slowing global warming that featured William Nordhaus (Yale University), recipient of the 2018 Nobel Prize in Economic Sciences. The program included remarks from Pinelopi Goldberg (Yale University; formerly, The World Bank Group) and Scott Barrett (Columbia University) as well as introductions from Steven Wilkinson (Yale University) and David Oxtoby (American Academy of Arts & Sciences).
Bulletin
|
Feb 20, 2024

From the Archives

From the Archives
Press Release
|
Apr 24, 2014

American Academy Report Calls for More Research on Parental Decision-Making on Childhood Vaccines

Public Trust in Vaccines identifies priorities for future research that would elucidate how health care providers can best communicate with undecided parents about the individual and community benefits of childhood vaccinations.
Bulletin
|
Feb 19, 2021

Telling our Regional Story: The Narratives that Unite and Divide in North Carolina

A challenge facing the United States is how to combine the good and bad of our history into shared narratives. Telling Our Nation’s Story, one of the recommendations of the Academy’s Commission on the Practice of Democratic Citizenship, calls for communities to work toward a common narrative by engaging in honest conversations about the past in order to reckon with what divides us while uncovering what unites us. Participants in this virtual program brought a regional approach to a conversation across the Research Triangle.
Bulletin
|
Aug 22, 2016

The Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty at 20

Lassina Zerbo, Rose E. Gottemoeller, Siegfried Hecker, and Robert Rosner participated in a discussion on the prospects for ratifying the Comprehensive Nuclear-Test-Ban Treaty and the challenges presented by nuclear testing.
Press Release
|
May 5, 2003

American Academy Announces New Class of Fellows and Foreign Honorary Members

Bulletin
|
Jan 1, 2001

Gender and Inequality: Old Questions, New Answers

Following an introduction from Robert C. Post, Linda K. Kerber discusses her work as part of a new generation of historians who have begun to study law as a cultural formation that both reflects and forms the discursive construction of collective identity in society.
Bulletin
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Feb 12, 2014

Middle East Regional Security Challenges: The View from Turkey

Bulletin
|
Aug 15, 2013

The Benefit of Public Investment in Higher Education: California and Beyond

On January 28, 2013, the Academy honored Robert J. Birgeneau, Chancellor Emeritus of the University of California, Berkeley, at a special symposium on the benefit of public investment in higher education. Chancellor Birgeneau, Mary Sue Coleman, and Henry E. Brady participated in a conversation on the future of America’s system of public higher education, focusing on the California model and beyond.
Bulletin
|
Nov 29, 2024

Science, Engineering & Technology

Academy projects in Science, Engineering, and Technology seek to strengthen the capacity of science and engineering to improve the human condition. This goal has never been more important for the nation or for the world than it is today. Global challenges increasingly require collaboration across disciplinary, professional, and national boundaries. Likewise, rapid advances in information processing and transmission raise new issues for the management of scientific knowledge and for action on new discoveries.
In the News
|
Jul 2, 2021

Museums Can Renew America Through the Semiquincentennial

The 250th anniversary of the United States’ founding is approaching, and the opportunities are huge for museums to reframe history and engage their communities more deeply.
Source
American Alliance of Museums
Bulletin
|
Aug 1, 2014

Growing Pains in a Rising China

Bulletin
|
May 17, 2023

On the Tenth Anniversary of The Heart of the Matter

On March 30–31, 2023, the Academy gathered humanities scholars and leaders at the House of the Academy in Cambridge, Massachusetts, to mark the tenth anniversary of the release of The Heart of the Matter, the final report of the Academy’s Commission on the Humanities and Social Sciences. The goal of the meeting was to reflect on what has happened to the humanities over the past decade and to consider future directions for the field. To provide context for the conversation, Richard H. Brodhead (who cochaired the Commission with the late John Rowe) offered the following reflections, describing what shaped their thinking a decade ago and what has changed in the years since.
Bulletin
|
Mar 1, 2000

Gut Reactions: How Caterpillars and People Disarm Alarming Substances with Cytochrome P540

May R. Berenbaum presented at the fall Stated Meeting of the Midwest Center of the American Academy. The talk was a condensed and popularized version of her paper titled "Animal-Plant Warfare: Molecular Basis for Cytochrome P450-Mediated Natural Adaptation."
Bulletin
|
Feb 10, 2020

2019 Induction Ceremony

Climate change, soil erosion, human rights, Indigenous peoples, and “fixing” our democracy — the class speakers at the 2019 Induction Ceremony addressed major issues facing the world today, with calls to action and calls for change. Following a reading from the letters of John and Abigail Adams by humanitarian Jane Olson and attorney Ronald Olson, newly elected members spoke passionately about their life’s work. The ceremony featured presentations from paleoclimatologists Ellen Mosley-Thompson and Lonnie G. Thompson; microbiologist Jo Handelsman; former United Nations diplomat Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein; historian Margaret Jacobs; and lawyer and advocate Sherrilyn Ifill. An edited version of their presentations follows.
2083rd Stated Meeting | October 12, 2019 | Cambridge, MA

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