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Members of the Commission on Accelerating Climate Action stand in a grassy park in Miami’s Little River neighborhood while on a walking tour led by staff at the Miami-Dade County Office of Resilience.
Bulletin
|
Jul 31, 2024

Climate Action Has Accelerated but There Is More Work to Be Done

The conversation about climate change has evolved dramatically over the past three years. Since the Academy’s Board of Directors issued a public statement on climate change and the Academy’s Commission on Accelerating Climate Action began, public opinion and legislative measures have shifted toward more significant climate solutions.
Bulletin
|
Aug 22, 2016

The Regulatory and Ethical Dimensions of Human Performance Enhancement

For centuries, humans have sought to enhance their natural appearance and abilities through medicine, surgery, exercise, and education. Today, performance enhancement is most often associated with drugs taken by athletes and college students to improve physical and mental performance.
Press Release
|
Sep 27, 2021

Addressing Climate Change as a Priority and a Project

After the Board of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences issued a statement attesting to the science and threat of climate change, the Academy launched a new project dedicated to accelerating climate action.
Press Release
|
Apr 17, 2012

Hillary Rodham Clinton, Tyler Jacks, Andre Previn, and Melinda F. Gates Elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences

Bulletin
|
Dec 6, 2021

Global Security & International Affairs

The Global Security and International Affairs program area draws on the expertise of policy-makers, practitioners, and scholars to foster knowledge and inform innovative and more substantial policies to address crucial issues affecting the global community. Projects underway in this area engage with pressing strategic development and moral questions that underpin relations among people, communities, and states worldwide. Each initiative embraces a broad conception of security as the interaction among human, national, and global security imperatives. Project recommendations move beyond the idea of security as the absence of war toward higher aspirations of collective peace, development, and justice.
Press Release
|
Mar 24, 2020

Meeting the Challenges of a New Nuclear Age

The Spring 2020 issue of Dædalus, “Meeting the Challenges of a New Nuclear Age,” guest-edited by Robert Legvold and Christopher F. Chyba, examines some of the possible escalation pathways that could lead one or more states to use nuclear weapons.
Bulletin
|
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.
Data Forum
|
Feb 20, 2019

Introducing the National Inventory of Humanities Organizations

Today the Academy’s Humanities Indicators launches its latest informational resource, the National Inventory of Humanities Organizations (NIHO).
In the News
|
Oct 24, 2013

Brodhead: In an Age of Metrics, Liberal Arts Education Still Holds Value

Richard Brodhead, president of Duke University, addresses the future of liberal arts education.
Source
Duke Today
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.
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
|
Mar 1, 2023

The Effects of Prolonged War on Democracy

Political scientists, historians, lawyers, policy-makers, anthropologists, and aca­demics as well as retired U.S. military personnel and a Washington, D.C., reserve police officer shared their expertise in militarization, civil-military relations, democratic erosion, gender and security issues, White supremacy movements, and budgeting and public finance to explore the relationships between long-term militarization, extremism, and democracy, both within the United States and abroad.
In the News
|
Feb 20, 2017

How governments and companies can prevent the next insider attack

In today’s high-tech and hyperconnected world, threats from insiders go far beyond leakers and lone-wolf shooters. How can we better protect against the enemy within, no matter what it is that needs to be protected?
Source
The Conversation
Press Release
|
Nov 2, 2015

Inaugural Distinguished Morton L. Mandel Annual Public Lecture at American Academy of Arts and Sciences Focuses on Access to U.S. Justice System

Experts in five locations—Berkeley, Cambridge, Chicago, New York, and Washington, D.C.—to lead discussions about legal justice on November 11 as part of the Academy’s inaugural Distinguished Morton L. Mandel Annual Public Lecture.
Bulletin
|
Jun 1, 2015

Dædalus Examines the “Successful Aging of Societies”

The Spring 2015 issue of Dædalus on “Successful Aging of Societies” explores the opportunities and challenges facing the United States as it undergoes an unprecedented demographic transformation.
Academy Article
|
Jun 7, 2024

Environmental Justice and Philanthropy Panel

The American Academy of Arts and Sciences hosted in May Integrating Environmental Justice and Philanthropy: Lessons and Opportunities as part of ongoing outreach for the recommendations in Forging Climate Solutions: How to Accelerate Action Across America.
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.
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
|
May 14, 2024

From the Archives

From the Archives
Bulletin
|
Jan 1, 2013

From the Archives: Fothergill’s Ice-Islands

Anthony Fothergill (1732–1813) was an Edinburgh-educated physician and natural historian. In 1806, he sent an essay to the Academy entitled “Memoir on the origin & formation of ice-islands, and their dangerous effects in navigation, pointing out a certain and easy method of timely forewarning seamen of their approach even in the darkest night.”

Pagination

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