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Press Release
|
Apr 20, 2010

Dædalus Spring 2010 Issue Published: The Future of News

The Spring 2010 issue of Dædalus explores the impact of new technologies and evolving patterns of news consumption on American media. Sixteen authors join guest editor Loren Ghiglione, a veteran of almost four decades in journalism and the Richard A. Schwarzlose Professor of Media Ethics at Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism, in an in-depth look at the revolution occurring in the news media and the future of investigative journalism.
Bulletin
|
Feb 27, 2017

China’s Repeated Reunifications

​​​​​​​Why has China, for so much of its history, been the most populous country in the world? How were the states that were formed in China able to rule larger territories and populations and maintain centralized structures longer than governments elsewhere?
Bulletin
|
Jan 1, 2001

Census 2000 and the Fuzzy Boundary Separating Politics and Science

The decennial census is the longest continuous scientific project in American history. It is also the largest applied social science project undertaken in this country.
Bulletin
|
May 20, 2025

The World in 2025

The Academy hosted a discussion about pressing issues facing the world in 2025. The event featured Kwame Anthony Appiah (New York University), Michael Froman (Council on Foreign Relations), and Adam Tooze (Columbia University) in conversation with Anne-Marie Slaughter (New America). Academy President Laurie L. Patton delivered the opening remarks. Transcript and video online.


Bulletin
|
May 1, 2000

Immigration: Proposition 187, Five Years Later

Immigration is not only where the people come from, and why they come, and whether they are forced to come; it's also how and, in the long run, whether they are received.
Bulletin
|
Mar 24, 2016

Commission on the Future of Undergraduate Education

Higher education continues to be one of the most important avenues of opportunity in American society. But the education landscape is changing rapidly: there are more options for how and when Americans receive some form of higher education.
In the News
|
Mar 1, 2017

Same Topic, Different Tongue: the American Academy Report on Language Learning

At the National Press Club, members of the Academy's language commission met for a public discussion of their answers. Commission member Rubén Rumbaut, offered the core of the commission’s framing, “Ironically, despite the diversity of American languages, the United States has acquired the dubious designation of being a language graveyard...we have immigrants and children of immigrants not passing on their language skills.”
Source
Ed Central
Bulletin
|
Jan 1, 2001

The Challenges to the Humanities

Although declarations and prophesies of doom for the humanities abound, they provide no consistent facts about the current or past situation of the collection of academic interests loosely defined as the humanities. The Academy is trying to provide a body of information and of ideas that will support intellectual community and intellectual action.
Bulletin
|
Feb 10, 2022

New Horizons: Elevating the Arts in American Life

To celebrate the arts, artists, and the work of the Academy’s Commission on the Arts, Stephen Colbert, host of “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert,” talked with Commission Cochairs John Lithgow, Deborah Rutter, and Natasha Trethewey. The program included poetry, music, and a discussion of the recommendations developed by the Commission to elevate the arts, support artists, and promote arts education in America. The event also introduced Mixtape, an online collection of arts experiences that features members of the Commission and members of the Academy.
Bulletin
|
Dec 6, 2021

Remembrance of Stephen R. Graubard

Remembrance of Stephen R. Graubard
Press Release
|
Jan 11, 2021

Dædalus, Journal of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences, Becomes Open Access

The American Academy of Arts & Sciences and The MIT Press are today announcing that Dædalus, Journal of the American Academy, will now be an open access publication.
Bulletin
|
Aug 20, 2015

Discovering Handel’s London through His Music

Ellen T. Harris spoke at the Academy about Handel’s life and his inner circle of friends.
Bulletin
|
May 14, 2024

From the Archives

From the Archives
Bulletin
|
Apr 24, 2026

How Does Knowledge Survive?

On a gray London morning in January, I walked past familiar markers of institutional gravity on my way to the Royal Society. Stone facades. Heavy doors. Plaques engraved with names that have outlived the controversies of their eras. It is easy, in places like this, to slip into a kind of historical reverence that feels comforting, even anesthetizing.
Bulletin
|
Feb 20, 2026

From the President

As I reflect on my first year as president of the Academy, I am struck by how our members came together in so many different ways to address such a broad range of challenges, including unprecedented threats to academic freedom, the research enterprise, and the rule of law. And while it was a year of great challenges, there were also moments of great hope. For me, top among those moments was the Induction of our 2025 class of new members here in Cambridge in October.
Press Release
|
Sep 24, 2020

A New Report and Recommendations: Civil Justice for All

A new report from the American Academy of Arts & Sciences highlights the national civil justice gap by examining the causes of the problem and recommending innovative ways to address it.
Bulletin
|
Jan 1, 2000

Eric S. Lander

Press Release
|
Jun 12, 2017

Can Nuclear Waste Management Be Commercially Viable?

Academy report includes a roadmap for storing spent nuclear fuel
Bulletin
|
May 3, 2021

New Dædalus Issue Explores Immigration, Nativism & Race

Dysfunctional immigration policies implemented in recent decades have accelerated growth of the Latino population and racialized its members around the trope of illegality. Until 2016, the cultivation of White resentment relied on a dog-whistle politics of racially coded symbolic language, but with the election of Donald Trump, White nationalist sentiments became explicit.
Bulletin
|
May 14, 2024

From the President

From the President

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