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Bulletin
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Aug 15, 2013

Learning from Fukushima: Improving Nuclear Safety and Security after Accidents

How can nuclear technology be made safer? How should nuclear installations be protected from potential attacks by terrorist groups and from sabotage carried out by insiders? What policies should aspiring nuclear countries enact to fulfill their global commitment to the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (NPT)? These questions and others were discussed at a recent Academy symposium held in Hiroshima, Japan, on June 26–28, 2013.
Press Release
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Jan 16, 2013

Societal Transition Needed to Address Climate Change

Limiting the effects of climate change will require a substantial transformation of the energy infrastructure. The Winter 2013 issue of Dædalus explores an equally important but less appreciated requirement for reducing global greenhouse gas emissions: the societal transition that must accompany these technological changes.
Bulletin
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Aug 22, 2017

On Free Speech and Academic Freedom

Free speech makes no distinction about quality; academic freedom does. Are all opinions equally valid in a university classroom? Joan Wallach Scott speaks about academic freedom after accepting the Talcott Parsons Prize.
Bulletin
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Aug 30, 2022

Noteworthy

Select Prizes and Awards to Members
Press Release
|
Nov 26, 2004

Experts Describe Failure of Military Reform in Russia

Russia's military -- among the world's largest and with nuclear weapons and stockpiles that remain a global concern -- suffers from severe desertion problems, a lack of qualified officers, a breakdown in the conscription system, rampant corruption, and a deficit of training and effectiveness, according to the contributors to a new publication "The Russian Military: Power and Policy."
Bulletin
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Mar 1, 2013

Stewarding America: Civic Institutions and the Public Good

In the face of increasing polarization and considerable stress on the American polity, a new issue of Dædalus begins a much-needed public conversation about how individuals and institutions can work together to strengthen democracy and promote the common good.
Press Release
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Apr 25, 2012

Promoting strategies for U.S. energy policy: New Dædalus emphasizes local over global approaches

Three forces will fundamentally shape America’s energy future: climate change, national security, and global competition. A more effective national energy policy could better respond to these challenges by encouraging the adoption of new technologies and more realistic pricing models, according to contributors to the Spring 2012 issue of Dædalus, Journal of the American Academy.
Press Release
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Apr 24, 2017

Key Business, Science, and University Leaders Report Some Progress, But Much More Needs to be Done On Innovation

Organizers of 2015 “Innovation: An American Imperative” Issue Progress Report Detailing Path Congress & Administration Must Take To Ensure U.S. Remains Global Innovation Leader
Bulletin
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Jul 26, 2021

Deconstruct? Reconstruct? Dædalus Debates the Administrative State

While COVID-19 cases and mortality surged in spring and summer 2020, the U.S. government seemed to lack the capacity to respond. Mixed messaging and insufficient testing, ventilators, personal protective equipment, and contact tracing raised disturbing questions about the will of the executive and the health of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. But were these challenges particular to the pandemic? Or, as one author asks in the newest issue of Dædalus, “is the failed pandemic response a symptom of a diseased administrative state?”
Bulletin
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May 3, 2021

How Are Your Students Doing? New Reports from the Humanities Indicators on the Earnings and Job Outcomes of College Graduates

An examination of the financial advantage earning a bachelor’s degree, in any major, provides over not attaining the degree.
Press Release
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Oct 9, 2008

Nuclear Arms Control Leaders Receive Prestigious Rumford Prize from the American Academy

Former Secretary of State George P. Shultz, former Secretary of Defense William J. Perry, former Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Sam Nunn, and prominent physicist and arms control expert Sidney D. Drell, will be honored with one of the nation’s oldest awards.
Bulletin
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Aug 20, 2015

Dædalus Explores the Challenges and Opportunities Associated with Increasing Demands on a Limited Resource: Water

There is no resource more central to life on Earth than water. It is essential to the survival of people, organisms, and economies; its availability is inextricably linked to humanity’s need for security, energy, food, and community. The Summer 2015 issue of Dædalus moves beyond the failures of our tried approaches to water management.
Bulletin
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Aug 1, 2014

Dædalus Examines “The Invention of Courts”

What challenges confront U.S. courts as democratic institutions in the twenty-first century? And what does the changing role of courts teach us about our conceptions of justice? The Summer 2014 issue of Dædalus explores the complex shifts occurring in U.S. courts and the implications for the citizens that rely on them.
Bulletin
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Aug 20, 2015

On Legal Services for the Poor

John G. Levi discusses access to justice, and how many low-income Americans have significant difficulty navigating our country’s legal system on their own.
Press Release
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Apr 28, 2007

Nation’s Oldest Learned Societies Present Public Good Awards to Billington, Franklin, and O’Connor

Librarian of the Congress James H. Billington, historian and scholar John Hope Franklin, and former Supreme Court Justice Sandra Day O’Connor will receive the Public Good Award from the two organizations in recognition of their significant contributions to the advancement of learning and knowledge.
Press Release
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Jul 30, 2015

American Academy of Arts & Sciences to Conduct First National Study on Foreign Language Learning in More Than 30 Years

Study is requested by bipartisan group of members of U.S. Senate & House of Representatives.
Bulletin
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Aug 22, 2017

A Reading and Discussion of Paradise, a play by Laura Maria Censabella

Members of the Catalyst Collaborative@MIT performed a staged reading of Paradise, a play by Laura Maria Censabella. The program included a panel discussion featuring Paula T. Hammond, Rebecca Saxe, and Saba Valadkhan.
Bulletin
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Aug 22, 2017

Dædalus explores “The Prospects & Limits of Deliberative Democracy”

Bulletin
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Aug 14, 2018

New Humanities Indicators on Career Outcomes for Recipients of Advanced Degrees

In a series of recent reports, leaders in the sciences, humanities, and higher education have called for additional data on the career outcomes of recipients of graduate degrees. Drawing on national surveys of college graduates, the American Academy’s Humanities Indicators offers a fresh perspective on the outcomes of recipients of advanced degrees, providing a snapshot of their earnings, occupations, and job satisfaction.
Bulletin
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May 3, 2021

Honoring Ruth Lehmann and Gertrud Schüpbach

The Academy’s Francis Amory Prize recognizes major contributions to the field of reproductive biology and was first awarded in 1940. Over the years, the prize recipients have reflected the increasing complexity and remarkable scientific progress in the field of reproductive biology.

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