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Bulletin
|
Nov 29, 2024

Member Events, 2023–2024

The Academy holds virtual events as well as in-person events around the country and the world that bring members, representatives of the Affiliates, and others together to explore topics of national and global concern.
Bulletin
|
Feb 19, 2021

A Conversation with Astronaut Jessica Meir

NASA astronaut Jessica Meir made history in October 2019 when she participated in the first all-female spacewalk. After 205 days in the isolation of space, she returned to a planet experiencing its own form of isolation: the global COVID-19 pandemic. As an astronaut and a marine biologist, Dr. Meir’s research into the impact of extreme environments has brought her to the depths of the Antarctic and the heights of space. At a virtual program, hosted by the Academy’s San Diego Program Committee, Dr. Meir described her research and her experiences in space and participated in a conversation with Brian Keating (University of California San Diego) about the perspectives that her work provides about our world.
Bulletin
|
Jan 1, 2001

Academy Update: Initiative for Humanities and Culture

Representatives of the Initiative for Humanities and Culture's two major components—the Research Program and the Humanities Indicators Program—came together to refine and elaborate on their future plans and to learn about each other's progress.
Bulletin
|
Mar 1, 2001

Recent Academy Publications

Bulletin
|
Feb 12, 2014

Middle East Regional Security Challenges: The View from Turkey

Bulletin
|
Mar 7, 2018

Priorities for Progress: Advancing Higher Education in America

On October 26, 2017, the American Academy hosted a conversation at the University of California, Berkeley, on "Priorities for Progress: Advancing Higher Education in America," which highlighted two Academy projects – The Lincoln Project: Excellence and Access in Public Higher Education and the Commission on the Future of Undergraduate Education.
Bulletin
|
Dec 1, 2023

Member Events, 2022–2023

The Academy holds events virtually as well as in person around the country and the world that bring members, representatives of the Affiliates, and others together to explore topics of national and global concern. Academy President David W. Oxtoby provided opening remarks for most of the meetings listed below.
Bulletin
|
Dec 1, 2023

Board of Directors Statement on The Freedom to Learn: Approved September 2023

Since our nation’s founding, the American Academy of Arts and Sciences has celebrated excellence in every domain of scholarship and cultivated knowledge from many perspectives to advance the public good. The Academy is an independent, nonpartisan institution. Central to our work is a commitment to intellectual freedom–the freedom to teach, to learn, to speak, and to inquire without strictures of ideological or political orthodoxy. Freedom to pursue knowledge, without fear of censorship or discipline, is a bedrock value of our constitutional democracy and a practical condition for crafting the most effective solutions to our society’s toughest challenges.
Press Release
|
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.
Bulletin
|
Mar 1, 2013

The Future of Energy

Bulletin
|
May 1, 2020

Arms Trafficking: Its Past, Present, and Future

Arms trafficking has a long and influential history. At an Academy event held in Berkeley, California, historian Brian DeLay described how U.S. arms trafficking intervened at critical moments to destabilize Mexican governance. The program included commentary from historians Priya Satia and Daniel Sargent, as well as from political scientist Ron Hassner. The presentations explored how the history of arms trading may help to better understand the history of state-making and the power relations between the United States and the rest of the world.
Roundtable discussion at Academy summit on Civil Justice
Bulletin
|
Jul 31, 2024

Making Justice Accessible Summit

In a single year, 55 million Americans might face 260 million legal problems, such as fighting eviction threats from landlords, dealing with overwhelming medical bills from an unexpected illness that could lead to bankruptcy, or seeking assistance to escape abusive domestic situations. Yet only some Americans recognize that these problems are matters of civil justice. And even fewer have access to available, afford­able, and quality legal support needed to resolve these problems. This is the civil justice gap: the disparity between the legal needs of Americans and the resources available to meet those needs.
Press Release
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Mar 15, 2016

New American Academy of Arts and Sciences Initiative to Address Complex Relationship Between Scientists and the Public

Public Face of Science project will develop new assessments of public interactions with science, technology, medicine.
Bulletin
|
Mar 13, 2015

Russia – At the Crossroads Again?

Valerie Bunce, George W. Breslauer, and Timothy J. Colton discuss the ongoing crisis in Ukraine and Russia.
Press Release
|
Oct 21, 2013

Secretary of Smithsonian Institution to Speak at University of West Georgia

The University of West Georgia College of Arts and Humanities is serving as the statewide host site for discussion on a national report titled “The Heart of the Matter: the Humanities and Social Sciences” conducted by the American Academy of Arts & Sciences Commission on the Humanities and Social Sciences.
In the News
|
Jul 3, 2020

Commentary: Fixing Democracy

Dee Davis, president of the Center for Rural Strategies, writes about what democracy looks like in rural America - “a mess” - and how to fix it with ideas from the report he worked on as a member of the Academy's project on American democracy.
Source
Daily Yonder
Press Release
|
Jul 9, 2014

Nuclear Liability: A Key Component of the Public Policy Decision to Deploy Nuclear Energy in Southeast Asia

The unfortunate events at the Fukushima Daiichi power plant in March 2011 have raised serious issues for the world community. For countries with plans to develop nuclear energy programs, this incident highlights the need to determine the scope and adequacy of nuclear liability coverage in the event of a nuclear accident.
Bulletin
|
May 20, 2025

The Hellman and Simons Fellowship in Science and Technology Policy

The American Academy of Arts and Sciences is pleased to announce the creation of a new endowed fund to support its premier fellowship program in science-related policy. Previously named the Hellman Fellowship in Science and Technology Policy, the rebranded program will now be known as the Hellman and Simons Fellowship in Science and Technology Policy. The new name reflects the contributions of two families, the Hellman Family on the West Coast and the Simons Family on the East Coast, with strong philanthropic ties to the Academy and longstanding commitments to the critical importance of basic and academic science research in America.
Academy Article
|
Dec 1, 2018

Bridging America’s Language Gap: A Call to Action

Learn more about individuals and organizations working to support language instruction in America.
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.

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