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The U.S. House of Representatives is called into session on opening day of the 115th Congress, Jan. 3, 2017.
In the News
|
Dec 10, 2025

Support for Enlarging the House of Representatives in the Boston Globe

A Boston Globe editorial endorses responding to the nation’s “redistricting war” by increasing the size of the House of Representatives from its current 435 members, as recommended by the Academy in Our Common Purpose and a subsequent detailed proposal.
Source
Boston Globe editorial
In the News
|
Mar 22, 2019

The Humanities and the Future

Academy member Abraham Loeb connects the future of technological innovation to the lessons of the humanities, citing Academy report "The Heart of the Matter."
Source
Scientific American
Press Release
|
Apr 7, 2016

American Academy of Arts and Sciences Report Recommends Strategies to Sustain and Strengthen Public Research Universities

Public-private partnerships, new sources of revenue among recommendations for strategic directions
Press Release
|
Jul 3, 2018

Combating Corruption: New Dædalus Issue Examines How to Halt Political & Corporate Graft

Corruption can be ruinous, destroying nations, institutions, communities, individuals, the environment, and the very notion of public trust. Corruption self-reinforces, respects no law or border, and reproduces like disease. The Summer 2018 issue of Dædalus features fifteen essays exploring the nature of modern global corruption—and how to defeat it.
In the News
|
May 2, 2013

National Report Calls for Reorganization of US Scientific Enterprise

Source
Duke Today
In the News
|
Jun 30, 2020

Rebuilding Trust in American Democracy

Danielle Allen featured on BYU Radio about what she learned cochairing the Academy's bipartisan Commission on democratic citizenship and how recommended reforms can help Americans increase trust in one another and their institutions.
Source
BYU Radio
In the News
|
Dec 2, 2020

International Academies Urge More Language Education

Five international academies call for more investment in language education, to increase access to and diversity of languages spoken in the respective academies’ national borders, including Indigenous languages.
Source
Inside Higher Ed
The Geo-Cosmos at Miraikan, the National Museum of Emerging Science and Innovation. Tokyo, Japan.
In the News
|
Oct 6, 2021

The U.S. and International Science

While the scientific community understands the benefits of international scientific collaboration, risks of such collaboration to U.S. national security are now at the forefront of debate. Terry Magnuson examines the recommendations offered in “America and the International Future of Science,” a report from the Academy’s initiative to address Challenges for International Scientific Partnerships.
Source
UNC Research
Bulletin
|
May 3, 2021

Our Common Purpose in Communities Across the Country

Since the release in June 2020 of Our Common Purpose: Re­inventing American Democracy for the 21st Century, the final report of the Academy’s Commission on the Practice of Democratic Citizen­ship, there have been a number of surprising and inspiring stories about the impact the report has had. From giving the report away as Valentine’s Day presents to ordering a copy for everyone in the city government of Boise, Idaho, Our Common Purpose has been shared, read, downloaded, viewed, and discussed around the country.
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
In the News
|
Aug 23, 2021

Political Polarization, Civility, and Deliberative Democracy: A Conversation with Carolyn Lukensmeyer

Carolyn Lukensmeyer – an expert in deliberative democracy and a member of the Academy’s Commission on the Practice of Democratic Citizenship – describes the historical development of hyper-partisanship in the U.S., the opportunities that innovative political engagement offers, and suggests ways of healing the divides in our country in order to chart a collective path forward.
Source
Then & Now (podcast)
Supreme Court
In the News
|
Jul 2, 2019

Why civil courts’ larger problems can’t be simplified away

What if, by simplifying the courts — and expecting low-income people without representation to make productive use of the do-it-yourself tools available to them — the courts are inadvertently hindering access to justice? Lawyers Colleen Shanahan and Anna Carpenter make the argument in their Daedalus essay on why "Simplified Courts Can’t Solve Inequality."
Source
Thomson Reuters
Bulletin
|
May 3, 2021

The Academy & Its Future

A $100 Million Campaign for the American Academy of Arts & Sciences
Academy Article
|
Jan 29, 2016

Human Performance Enhancement Workshop

Performance-enhancing drugs are transforming athletic competitions; bionic suits are aiding transportation of heavy goods by military personnel; and psychotropic pills are shifting the learning landscape of our schools. Understanding these changes will help us prepare for the future.
Press Release
|
Sep 13, 2005

American Academy Releases New Volume on Democracy and Security in Post-Soviet Georgia

In November 2003 the people of the former Soviet state of Georgia forced a revolutionary change in leadership to establish a new government under President Mikhail Saakashvili. “Statehood and Security: Georgia after the Rose Revolution,” a new book from the American Academy, analyzes the security problems that confront this new government and the greater Caucasus region.
Bulletin
|
Mar 7, 2018

Humanities Indicators: College Graduates in the Workforce

Drawing largely on original research using federal data sets and the Gallup-Purdue Index survey of college alumni, the new report from the Humanities Indicators finds that college graduates with degrees from fields with below-average earnings are quite similar to graduates from other fields with respect to their perceived well-being.
Chinese characters are shown on a wall alongside numbers in a Potomac, Maryland classroom.
In the News
|
Jun 4, 2019

Why Speaking Only English Is Not Enough

Language immersion is needed to help address global challenges, yet U.S. citizens are falling behind. Nicholas B. Dirks, member of the Academy's Commission on Language Learning, offers his commentary.
Source
U.S. News & World Report
“Looking Backward. They Would Close to the New-Comer the Bridge That Carried Them and Their Fathers Over” (1893) by Joseph Ferdinand Keppler (1838–1894).
Press Release
|
Mar 30, 2021

New Dædalus Issue Explores Immigration, Nativism & Race in the United States

The criminalization of immigrants in America has been a decades-long project advanced by Democrats and Republicans alike with Donald Trump's campaign a sharp turn toward explicit nativism. The essays in the Spring 2021 issue of Dædalus offer a bleak assessment of how we got here, but some still find room for optimism.
Press Release
|
Apr 10, 2003

American Academy President Patricia Meyer Spacks Addresses Joint Meeting of the Academy and the Boston Athenaeum

In the News
|
Apr 8, 2014

Rethinking Energy Innovation and Social Science

Source
Energy Research & Social Science

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