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Archives Highlight

Joseph Pope’s Orrery

On November 22, 1788, the General Court of Massachusetts approved the Academy’s petition to hold a public lottery. Proceeds would go toward the purchase of a unique, grand model of the solar system for Harvard College.
Bulletin
|
Jun 1, 2010

Do Scientists Understand the Public? An Essay

This essay by Chris Mooney cogently distills off-the-record workshops for experts from the scientific community and representatives of the public to explore how scientists currently understand their obligation to the broader social and cultural contexts in which their work is received, and to examine ways to improve engagement between the scientific and public communities.
Bulletin
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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.
Bulletin
|
Dec 10, 2025

Governance & Committees, 2025–2026

Governance & Committees, 2025–2026
Bulletin
|
Aug 30, 2022

What Does It Mean to be an American? Reexamining the Rights and Responsibilities of Citizenship

2106th Stated Meeting | April 20, 2022 | Virtual Event
Jonathan F. Fanton Lecture
Press Release
|
Jan 31, 2018

A Historic Super Bowl: John Adams and Benjamin Franklin Join the Competition

The Super Bowl has inspired a wager between Robert Hauser, the executive officer of the American Philosophical Society (APS), based in Philadelphia and founded in 1743 by Benjamin Franklin, and Jonathan Fanton, the president of the Cambridge, Massachusetts-based American Academy of Arts & Sciences founded in 1780 by John Adams and others.
Bulletin
|
Dec 9, 2020

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.
Bulletin
|
Mar 13, 2015

The Academy at Work: Research Projects and Studies

Press Release
|
May 4, 2010

"From the Academy Archives" A new online resource

Press Release
|
Feb 7, 2006

Andrew W. Mellon Foundation Grant Will Help Create Humanities Indicators

The Academy, in conjunction with a consortium of national humanities organizations, will create a prototype set of indicators – statistical data about the people who work in the humanities and about the work they do – to provide a comprehensive picture of the state of the humanities in the United States, from primary to higher education to public humanities activities.
Press Release
|
Oct 5, 2015

New Dædalus Issue on “The Future of Food, Health & the Environment of a Full Earth”

Public broadcaster WGBH News to air in-depth reporting series expanding on <em>Dædalus</em> research and expertise
Press Release
|
Jul 30, 2009

Academy Sponsors Space Policy Briefing on Capitol Hill

The Obama Administration has an opportunity to fundamentally reformulate U.S. space policies that are anchored in Cold War-era mindsets. Participants in the American Academy’s “Reconsidering the Rules of Space” project briefed Washington policymakers today on options facing the Obama Administration in U.S. space policy.
Bulletin
|
Jul 31, 2024

From the Archives

Among the founding documents in the Academy Archives is a large bound volume, in three parts, of manuscript minutes, dating back to the Academy’s first meeting in May 1780. In addition to attendance rolls and descriptions of business trans­acted at these meetings, the volume contains other documents that chronicle the establishment of the organization’s rules, regulations, and practices.
Press Release
|
Apr 17, 2019

New 2019 Academy Members Announced

More than 200 individuals with compelling achievements in academia, business, government, and public affairs were elected to the Academy in 2019.
Students signing up for activities at an event at University of Pennsylvania. Photo by Eric Sucar.
Bulletin
|
Dec 10, 2025

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 any challenges that may arise.
Bulletin
|
Aug 1, 2014

Addressing Vaccine Hesitancy: An Editorial

There is a surge of outbreaks in vaccine-preventable diseases in the United States. What research is needed to reverse this trend?
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
|
Jan 1, 2000

Rosanna Warren and Galway Kinnell

Bulletin
|
May 20, 2025

The Academic Humanities Today: Findings from a New National Survey

Few need to be told that the academic humanities have been beset by challenges over the past fifteen years, but the evidence tends to be scattered. To provide a clearer picture of the state of the field, the Academy’s Humanities Indicators project recently released the results from a new national survey of humanities departments in fourteen humanities and humanities-adjacent disciplines, the fourth such survey since 2008. Drawing on responses from more than two thousand department chairs, the report demonstrates both the challenges the field experiences today and the resilience of many departments in the face of those difficulties.
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.

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