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Conservation Corps Members at work in a Montana Forest
Academy Article
|
Mar 29, 2024

Helping to Build Demand for National Service

One of the recommendations for strengthening democracy proposed in Our Common Purpose - the report of a bipartisan Academy commission - is expanding national service. To support that initiative, the Academy partnered with organizational leaders in the national service field to develop a better understanding of why people serve and how to increase engagement. This article shares key findings from that effort.
Academy Article
|
Jan 18, 2024

Building Demand for National Service: New Insights from Public Opinion Research

The American Academy of Arts and Sciences and America’s Service Commissions convened a virtual launch event to share findings from new public opinion research on young Americans' views about participating in a year of national service.
Bulletin
|
Mar 24, 2016

Making Justice Accessible

On November 11, 2015, Diane P. Wood, Goodwin Liu, and David S. Tatel discussed issues of access to the justice system. The program, which served as the 2027th Stated Meeting and the Inaugural Distinguished Morton L. Mandel Annual Public Lecture, was streamed to gatherings of members in four cities around the country: New York, Washington, Chicago, and Berkeley. The program concluded the first day of a two-day Academy symposium on the state of legal services for low-income Americans, which brought together federal and state judges, lawyers, legal scholars, and legal aid providers concerned about the state of legal services for Americans.
Bulletin
|
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.
Bulletin
|
Nov 29, 2024

American Institutions, Society & the Public Good

The American Academy of Arts and Sciences was founded by visionaries who foresaw that the nascent republic would benefit from the expertise of learned citizens to guide its development, health, and integrity through whatever challenges may arise.

Today, the clarity of that vision has never been more evident. We find ourselves in a time of deepening divides across lines of politics, race, religion, income, and opportunity. The institutions we have long turned to for leadership and information are under fire, as trust in the media, government, commercial enterprise, and academia declines. Strong and responsive institutions and a healthy civil society can carry us through crises and are vitally important in their aftermath.
AmeriCorps volunteers plant shrubs in a vacant lot
In the News
|
Mar 18, 2021

AmeriCorps service nurtures professional development, civic duty

Expanding national service to more young people is one tangible investment we can make in strengthening our republic and the ties that bind us together as a people. This op-ed looks at one of the recommendations from the Our Common Purpose report: to create a universal expectation of national service.
Source
The Baltimore Sun
Press Release
|
Jan 7, 2019

New Issue of Dædalus Takes on the Justice Gap Facing Poor and Low-Income Americans

“Access to Justice,” the Winter 2019 issue of Dædalus, the Journal of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences, is a multidisciplinary exploration of the challenges, costs, and opportunities related to the crisis of limited civil legal services.
Academy Article
|
Jan 24, 2024

Our Common Purpose - Reflections at the Midpoint

A reflection on work done to advance democratic renewal rooted in the recommendations of the Our Common Purpose report, issued by a bipartisan Academy Commission in 2020.
In the News
|
Dec 12, 2019

The Process Due: A Multidisciplinary Examination of the Devastating and Persistent Crisis in Legal Services

"Access to Justice," the Fall 2019 issue of Daedalus, is only the first of several efforts sponsored by the Academy to gather information about the national need for improved legal access, study innovations piloted around the country to fill this need, and advance a set of clear, national recommendations for closing the justice gap.
Source
Judicature
Bulletin
|
May 3, 2021

A Project to Advance Civil Justice Access in the 21st Century

An engraving above the western entrance to the U.S. Supreme Court proclaims a bold ideal for the American judicial system: “equal justice under law.” Unfortunately, the nation has not yet achieved the Court’s aspiration. While many Americans experience legal issues at some point in their lives, not everyone has access to the legal assistance that they need.
Bulletin
|
Mar 24, 2016

Legal Services for Low-Income Americans

On November 11 and 12, 2015, over 50 Judges and Justices, Chief Justices, legal scholars, and lawyers gathered at the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Brought together by John Levi, Chairman of the Legal Services Corporation; Martha Minow, Dean of the Harvard Law School; and Lance Liebman, former Dean of the Columbia Law School, the group discussed the nation’s failure to provide legal services for low-income Americans.
Bulletin
|
Jun 1, 2015

The Invention of Courts

Judith Resnik, Jonathan Lippman, Carol S. Steiker, Susan S. Silbey, Jamal Greene, and Linda Greenhouse participated in a conversation on the function of courts in the United States.
Bulletin
|
Sep 5, 2023

Dædalus Explores the Challenges of “Delivering Humanitarian Health Services in Violent Conflicts”

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has unleashed a humanitarian catastrophe, but Ukraine is only the most visible example of contemporary conflicts subjecting populations to systematic violence and depriving them of life-saving humanitarian assistance. In Ethiopia, Sudan, Yemen, and the Democratic Republic of the Congo, the eroding purchase of international humanitarian law, combined with intensifying geopolitical competition and the rapidly changing character of modern warfare, have put enormous strain on humanitarian actors. An issue of Daedalus explores the conflicts and the implications.
Bulletin
|
Jan 1, 2012

Induction Symposium: American Institutions and a Civil Society

The 2011 Induction weekend included a symposium on American Institutions and a Civil Society, which featured two panel discussions: The American Military and American Democracy and The Constitution, the Practice of Democracy, and Unintended Consequences.
An adult sits on the floor beside a backpack. They have pale skin, a thick dark mustache, and short black hair. A person stands behind them and bandages the top of their head. Red can be seen through the bandages. Two other people wait in the background.
Press Release
|
May 31, 2023

New Dædalus on Delivering Humanitarian Health Services in Violent Conflicts

The Spring 2023 issue of Dædalus on “Delivering Humanitarian Health Services in Violent Conflicts” features essays, poetry, fiction, and visual art to illuminate the dilemmas facing humanitarian health actors and the potential for innovation in humanitarian health delivery.
Bulletin
|
Dec 1, 2023

American Institutions, Society & the Public Good

The American Academy of Arts and Sciences was founded by visionaries who foresaw that the nascent republic would benefit from the expertise of learned citizens to guide its development, health, and integrity through whatever challenges may arise.
Bulletin
|
Nov 29, 2024

Highlights of Programmatic Impact

The Academy’s strategic priorities include improving the impact of the Academy’s work and raising the visibility of the institution with external audiences. These audiences vary and have included policymakers at the federal, state, and local level; leaders in philanthropy, higher education, nonprofit organizations, and business; scholars and students; advocacy groups; professional groups and practitioners; and the public.
People in long line at a courthouse door.
Press Release
|
Dec 4, 2024

How to Deliver and Increase Civil Justice in America

A new report from the Academy issues recommendations for closing the civil justice gap. Developed with an interdisciplinary approach involving legal professionals, scholars, and community leaders offers an array of approaches for delivering and increasing civil justice in America.
Bulletin
|
Jun 1, 2016

The Crisis in Legal Education

On December 4, 2015, at the Georgetown University Law Center, the Academy hosted a panel discussion on “The Crisis in Legal Education” with Louis Michael Seidman, Robert A. Katzmann, Philip G. Schrag, Robin L. West, and Patricia D. White.
Bulletin
|
Mar 8, 2019

New Issue of Dædalus Takes on the Justice Gap Facing Poor and Low-Income Americans

On January 7, 2019, the Academy published the first open-access issue of Dædalus in the journal’s sixty-four-year history. “Access to Justice,” the Winter 2019 issue, is a multidisciplinary examination of the national crisis in legal services, from the challenges of providing quality legal assistance to more people, to the social and economic costs of an of- ten unresponsive legal system, to the opportunities for improvement offered by new technologies, professional innovations, and fresh ways of thinking about the crisis.

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