Skip to main content

Utility navigation

  • Dædalus
  • Archives
  • Give
  • Login

Main navigation

  • Our Work
    • Explore by Topic
      • Arts & Humanities
      • Democracy & Justice
      • Education
      • Energy & Environment
      • Global Affairs
      • Science & Technology
    • View
      • Projects
      • Publications
  • Members
  • News
  • Events
  • Get Involved
  • About

Main navigation

  • Our Work
    • Explore by Topic
      • Arts & Humanities
      • Democracy & Justice
      • Education
      • Energy & Environment
      • Global Affairs
      • Science & Technology
    • View
      • Projects
      • Publications
  • Members
    • Member Directory
    • Magazine: The Bulletin
    • Local Committees
  • News
  • Events
  • Get Involved
  • About
    • Governance
      • Board of Directors
      • Council
      • Trust
      • Committees
      • President
    • Staff
    • Affiliates
    • Prizes
      • Amory
      • Distinguished Leadership
      • Don M. Randel Humanistic Studies
      • Emerson-Thoreau
      • Excellence in Public Policy
      • Founders
      • Rumford
      • Sarton History of Science
      • Sarton Poetry
      • Scholar-Patriot
      • Talcott Parsons
    • Fellowships
    • Location
    • History
    • Advisors
      • Education
      • The Humanities, Arts, and Culture
      • Science, Engineering, and Technology

Footer

  • Daedalus
  • Login
  • Archives
  • Give
  • Careers
  • Contact
  • Private Events

136 Irving Street
Cambridge, MA 02138

Social Media

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
Search results for

“WA 0852 2611 9277 RAB Interior Set Kamar Tidur Minimalis Kayu Apartment Red Top Jakarta Pusat”

Search

  • All (9821)
  • Events (361)
  • (-) News (1857)
  • People (5295)
  • Projects (103)
  • Publications (2205)
Press Release
|
Feb 4, 2002

Academy Fellows discuss causes and consequences of September 11 and its aftermath: Civil Liberties and National Security after September 11

Press Release
|
May 5, 2010

Shared Responsibilities for Nuclear Disarmament: A Global Debate

Achieving the goal of a world free of nuclear weapons will require the increased engagement of nations that currently do not posses nuclear arms of their own. In a new occasional paper from the Global Nuclear Future initiative, the authors move beyond the traditional cycle of complaints from the “have-nots” and retorts from the “haves” to suggest new ways to realize the shared goal of nuclear disarmament.
Bulletin
|
Dec 9, 2020

Academy Governance & Committees, 2020–2021

2020–2021 Academy Governance & Committees
Bulletin
|
Mar 1, 2012

Academy News

Data Forum
|
Aug 18, 2014

Who Takes Humanities Courses in College?

Compared with our knowledge about students who take courses in the sciences, we know very little about who takes humanities courses in college. With the sciences, most of what we know is about majors rather than courses taken because data on majors are more readily available. Therefore having basic information about relative course-taking by students who majored in particular subjects is extremely important.
Bulletin
|
Aug 14, 2018

On Sex and Death

Barbara J. Meyer accepts the Francis Amory Prize and gives a brief presentation about the fundamentals of sex and death.
Bulletin
|
Feb 19, 2021

New Academy Survey Reveals the Humanities in American Life

The American public holds the humanities in high regard, and most people engage in one or more humanistic activities at work and in their leisure hours, according to a recent national survey by the Academy’s Humanities Indicators project. The survey, conducted with generous funding from the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, asked 5,015 Americans age eighteen and older who participate in NORC at the University of Chicago’s nationally representative AmeriSpeak Panel about their engagement in a variety of humanistic activities, as well as their beliefs about the personal, societal, and economic benefits of the humanities.
Bulletin
|
May 20, 2019

Rediscovering Humanities Education in Community Colleges

Much of the attention about the humanities in higher education tends to focus on four-year colleges and universities (and more specifically, on the declining number of students who major in the humanities). In recent years, the American Academy’s Humanities Indicators (HI) have been exploring the growing presence of the humanities in the community college sector.
2017 Induction Ceremony of the American Academy
Bulletin
|
Mar 7, 2018

Induction Ceremony 2017: Presentations by New Members

On October 7, 2017, the American Academy inducted its 237th class of Members at a ceremony held in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The ceremony included presentations by five new Members: Ursula Burns, James P. Allison, Heather K. Gerken, Jane Mayer, and Gerald Chan.
In the News
|
Oct 8, 2018

Keeping Cornell Multilingual

Arts and sciences faculty sticks with a three-course-sequence foreign language requirement, even as other institutions shrink their language requirements.
Source
Inside Higher Ed
Press Release
|
Jun 1, 2002

Academy Fellows discuss causes and consequences of September 11 and its aftermath: Christian and Muslim perspectives on "Just War" doctrine

Bulletin
|
Dec 6, 2021

Academy Governance & Committees, 2021–2022

Governance & Committees, 2021–2022
Bulletin
|
Feb 27, 2017

Noteworthy

Bulletin
|
Feb 10, 2022

Reckoning with Organizational History

Over the last few years, organizations across the United States – corporations, universities, and nonprofits like the American Academy – have begun to reflect on their ties to slavery, Native genocide, and other troubling elements of American history. The Academy’s virtual event on “Reckoning with Organizational History” explored why historical self-examination matters and what can be gained from these studies.
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
|
Jul 1, 2012

Remembering H.M.

Bulletin
|
Mar 13, 2015

Ocean Exploration: Past, Present, and Future

Robert Ballard tells the story of his passionate career in ocean exploration and discusses the educational initiatives he has created to engage a new generation of scientists.
Bulletin
|
May 14, 2024

Anti-Globalism’s Past and Present

On March 20, 2024, the Academy’s University of Chicago Program Committee hosted an evening with historian Tara Zahra. Informed by her archival research and the themes in her most recent book, Against the World: Anti-Globalism and Mass Politics Between the World Wars, Professor Zahra discussed how the forces of early-twentieth-century global instability—the Spanish flu, the Great Depression, ethnonationalism, the development of both democracies and dictatorships—can help us better understand our own contemporary political moment. Following her presentation, she joined Academy President David W. Oxtoby in a conversation about the past, present, and future of our interconnected, yet increasingly divided, world. John Mark Hansen, a member of the Academy’s Board of Directors, opened the program. The event was organized as a Jonathan F. Fanton Lecture, in honor of the past president of the Academy whose career has been dedicated to solving global issues. Jonathan F. Fanton and his wife Cynthia were in attendance. An edited version of Professor Zahra’s remarks and her conversation with President Oxtoby follows.
Bulletin
|
Mar 1, 2023

2022 Induction Ceremony

The importance of public-private partnership; the assault on science and scientists; the attacks on knowledge, ideas, education, and democracy; the history of the American West and the American military; and the power of stories to teach, build bridges, and bring about social change – the class speakers at the Induction Ceremony for members elected in 2020 and 2021 addressed major issues facing the world today, with calls to action and calls for change. The ceremony featured presentations from engineer Lisa T. Su; neurosurgeon, medical reporter, and writer Sanjay Gupta; scholar and writer on civil rights and critical race theory Kimberlé W. Crenshaw; historian Patricia Limerick; and labor union activist Mary Kay Henry. An edited version of their presentations follows.
Bulletin
|
Jun 1, 2015

Ferguson and the Meaning of Race in America

Academy member Douglas S. Massey discusses Ferguson and the meaning of race in America for the Bulletin’s new feature, “On the Professions.”

Pagination

  • Previous page ←
  • 3 of 93
  • Next page →

136 Irving Street
Cambridge, MA 02138

617-576-5000

VEHICLE ENTRANCE

200 Beacon Street
Somerville, MA 02143

Main navigation

  • Our Work
  • Members
  • News
  • Events
  • Get Involved
  • About

Footer

  • Daedalus
  • Login
  • Archives
  • Give
  • Careers
  • Contact
  • Private Events

Social Media

  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube
© 2026

American Academy of Arts & Sciences  |  Web Policy