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Bulletin
|
Aug 22, 2016

Public Research Universities: Serving the Public Interest in Michigan

Mark S. Schlissel, Mary Sue Coleman, Patrick Doyle, M. Roy Wilson, and Lou Anna K. Simon participated in a discussion at the University of Michigan about public research universities and their role in serving the public interest in Michigan.
Bulletin
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Jun 1, 2004

Alexander Graham Bell: Researches in Telephony

Alexander Graham Bell’s paper “Researches in Telephony” was presented at a Stated Meeting of the Academy on May 10, 1876. In it, he considers the “three varieties of currents”–intermittent, pulsatory, and undulatory–that produce telephonic effects, and he also describes one of his experiments.
Bulletin
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May 17, 2023

Introducing America to Americans: New Photojournal from the Commission on Reimagining Our Economy

The Commission on Reimagining Our Economy is working on a photojournal with the work of four photographers capturing what it looks like to try to get by in the United States today for Americans earning around the national median income ($70,784 for a household in 2021).
Bulletin
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May 11, 2017

Ending Preventable Newborn Death in Africa

Although global child mortality has dropped by 50 percent since 1990, neonatal mortality has declined much more slowly. Newborns now represent more than 40 percent of under-five deaths, and preterm birth is the world’s leading killer of children.
Press Release
|
Nov 30, 2017

Priorities for Undergraduate Education in America: Improving Quality, Affordability, and Completion Rates

There is significant work to be done to create a nation in which more Americans obtain an excellent undergraduate education and a meaningful degree without taking on onerous debt.
Press Release
|
Jul 11, 2016

New Dædalus Issue on “On Political Leadership”

Published during the 2016 U.S. presidential election, these essays offer expert insight into the character and quality of effective political leadership.
Bulletin
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Aug 30, 2022

Checking Kleptocracy: Considering the Potential Establishment of an International Anti-Corruption Court

By Kathryn Moffat, Senior Program Officer for Global Security and International Affairs at the Academy
In the News
|
Feb 6, 2019

Foreign language classes becoming more scarce

Citing Academy report "America's Languages," Kathleen Stein-Smith explores the increasing scarcity of foreign language classes and teachers.
Source
The Conversation
Bulletin
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Aug 22, 2016

Managing the Benefits and Risks of Nuclear, Biological, and Information Technologies

The Academy hosted a meeting at the University of Chicago on the benefits and risks of nuclear, biological, and information technologies. The speakers included Robert Rosner, James M. Acton, Elisa D. Harris, and Herbert Lin.
Bulletin
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Jul 31, 2024

Honoring Kwame Anthony Appiah

On April 18, 2024, Kwame Anthony Appiah received the Academy’s Don M. Randel Award for Humanistic Studies. Established in 1975 as the Award for Humanistic Studies and renamed in 2017 in honor of musicologist Don M. Randel, the award recognizes outstanding contributions to humanistic scholarship. The award ceremony included opening remarks from Academy President David W. Oxtoby, a reading of the prize citation by Henry Louis Gates, Jr., acceptance remarks from Professor Appiah, and a conversation between Professor Appiah and journalist Margaret Sullivan. An edited transcript of the program follows.
In the News
|
Nov 22, 2021

The number of college graduates in the humanities drops for the eighth consecutive year

Rob Townsend of the American Academy speaks about the puzzling decline of more than 30 percent in English and history majors, citing the latest Humanities Indicators report on The State of the Humanities 2021: Workforce & Beyond.
Source
The Hechinger Report
Bulletin
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Jan 1, 2012

Academy News

Bulletin
|
May 11, 2017

Commission on the Future of Undergraduate Education

With generous support from Carnegie Corporation of New York, the Commission on the Future of Undergraduate Education is conducting an analysis of American undergraduate education and looking ahead several decades at the educational challenges and opportunities facing Americans.
Bulletin
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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
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Jun 1, 2016

Chiefs: A Perspective from Prehistory on Modern Failing States

There was a time before strong leaders, social inequality, and class systems. Coming of age in the 1960s, my motivation was to understand and hopefully help alter the world of unjust and unstable societies. This personal essay summarizes my career as an archaeologist studying the emergence of complex political systems.
Bulletin
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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.
Bulletin
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May 1, 2020

The Global Refugee Crisis: What’s Next and What Can Be Done?

“More people worldwide are being displaced from their homes for longer periods than ever before,” noted David Miliband, president and chief executive officer of the International Rescue Committee, at a gathering of Academy members and guests at the inaugural Jonathan F. Fanton Lecture in New York. Miliband, one of the foremost advocates for refugees and a leader in responses to global humanitarian and human rights crises, described the causes of today’s global refugee crisis and offered solutions, both simple and effective.
Press Release
|
Feb 28, 2017

United States Needs to Significantly Increase Access to Language Learning to Remain Competitive

First national study of language learning in 30 years was requested from the American Academy of Arts and Sciences by a bipartisan group of members of U.S. Senate & House of Representatives
Image of the Sunway TaihuLight, a Chinese supercomputer.
Press Release
|
Sep 30, 2020

A New Report about America, China, and the Future of Innovation - The Perils of Complacency

A new report sets forth concerns about America's inadequate investment in R&D for science and engineering as China advances. The report makes recommendations that could help ensure the United States secures its strong position of global leadership in discovery and innovation.

Bulletin
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Aug 22, 2016

What Evidence Should We Trust?

When forced to decide between a career in biochemistry or psychology in the spring of 1950, Jerome Kagan chose the latter because of a gnawing puzzlement provoked by the observation that apparently sane people living in the same community held different beliefs about love, honesty, and whom was entitled to respect and whom to scorn.

Pagination

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