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Bulletin
|
Dec 10, 2025

Highlights of Programmatic Impact

The Academy’s new strategic framework presents four animating principles and seven strategies that are designed to ensure that the Academy continues to produce high-quality, interdisciplinary work that addresses urgent societal challenges. In 2025, the Academy’s programmatic work laid the groundwork for new projects and initiatives that will implement this framework and built on ongoing efforts to increase impact and raise the visibility of the institution with external audiences. These audiences include 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.
Bulletin
|
Jan 1, 2013

Challenges to American Institutions

A panel discussion on Institutions of Democracy and the Public Good was the focus of the Academy's 2012 Induction Weekend, featuring Diane Wood, Governor Phil Bredesen, and Ambassador Karl Eikenberry alongside Judy Woodruff, Alex Jones, and Marty Baron. The discussion was moderated by Norman Ornstein.
Bulletin
|
Aug 7, 2020

New Issue of Dædalus Explores the Intersection of Democracy & Religion

On June 15, 2020, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled by a 6-to-3 majority that “An employer who fires an individual merely for being gay or transgender defies the law.” This ruling is a historic victory for gay and transgender rights, extending employment protections to millions of LGBT+ workers, and will force many employers to revisit and change discriminatory policies and practices. But what this means for faith-based employers, including religious schools and religious health care providers, will be decided in future cases. Are faith-based employers legally entitled to religious exemptions to the law? Should they be?
Press Release
|
Jul 3, 2018

Combating Corruption: New Dædalus Issue Examines How to Halt Political & Corporate Graft

Corruption can be ruinous, destroying nations, institutions, communities, individuals, the environment, and the very notion of public trust. Corruption self-reinforces, respects no law or border, and reproduces like disease. The Summer 2018 issue of Dædalus features fifteen essays exploring the nature of modern global corruption—and how to defeat it.
Fire raging in foreground with buildings in the background and sun.
Academy Article
|
Oct 21, 2025

The Environmental Impacts of Modern Wars

Militaries, like civilian industries, have a profound capacity to pollute the air, land, and water. What are the estimates of military impact on the environment? And what are some ways to reduce it? The Academy convened a range of experts to consider impacts and options.
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.
Bulletin
|
Feb 20, 2024

Becoming Interplanetary and Action for Spaceship Earth

On October 17, 2023, Dava Newman (Director of the MIT Media Lab and former NASA Deputy Administrator) spoke about the MIT Media Lab’s work and the use of vast amounts of data collected by satellites to inform and motivate the public for the fight against climate change. The program included welcoming remarks by Academy President David W. Oxtoby. An edited and condensed version of Dr. Newman’s presentation follows.
Bulletin
|
Mar 7, 2018

From the President

The Academy is engaged in a number of projects, studies, and meetings that, when taken together, support the quality education and informed exchange that shape a healthy and inclusive democratic society. Just recently the Academy announced a Commission on the Practice of Democratic Citizenship
Bulletin
|
Feb 27, 2025

Recent Dædalus Issues Explore the Future of Free Speech and the Global Quest for Educational Equity

Recent Dædalus Issues Explore the Future of Free Speech and the Global Quest for Educational Equity
Martha Minow and John Palfrey discuss the intersection between a growing commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion and the tradition of free expression on school campuses.
Bulletin
|
Aug 7, 2019

Safe Spaces, Brave Spaces: Diversity and Free Expression in Education

On May 7, 2019, John Palfrey spoke about the intersection between a growing commitment to diversity, equity, and inclusion and the tradition of free expression on school campuses. Martha Minow participated in a conversation with John Palfrey following his opening remarks.
Bulletin
|
May 17, 2023

On the Tenth Anniversary of The Heart of the Matter

On March 30–31, 2023, the Academy gathered humanities scholars and leaders at the House of the Academy in Cambridge, Massachusetts, to mark the tenth anniversary of the release of The Heart of the Matter, the final report of the Academy’s Commission on the Humanities and Social Sciences. The goal of the meeting was to reflect on what has happened to the humanities over the past decade and to consider future directions for the field. To provide context for the conversation, Richard H. Brodhead (who cochaired the Commission with the late John Rowe) offered the following reflections, describing what shaped their thinking a decade ago and what has changed in the years since.
Press Release
|
Jul 19, 2012

Science in the 21st Century: From studies of single-celled organisms to distant planets, Dædalus examines how science is changing our world

From the invention of new life forms to the discovery of life beyond Earth, science is reshaping our understanding of the universe in the twenty-first century. In the Summer 2012 issue of Dædalus, leading scientists describe emerging advances in nanoscience, neuroscience, genetics, paleontology, microbiology, mathematics, planetary science, and plant biology.
Press Release
|
Sep 22, 2016

Data-Rich Report on College Access—Plus Student Readiness & Completion—Released by Commission on the Future of Undergraduate Education

National commission from the American Academy of Arts and Sciences delivers key takeaways from its data-driven examination of opportunities and challenges for U.S. higher education students.
In the News
|
Jul 2, 2020

Tech companies are finally being shamed into action

Washington Post columnist Jennifer Rubin writes about increasing concern about online platforms that allow hate speech and engender extremism. She notes that corporate boycotts are a sign of dissatisfaction and points to the Academy's work for meaningful solutions.
Source
The Washington Post
Bulletin
|
Dec 1, 2023

Academy Publications

A list of recent publications.
Bulletin
|
May 20, 2025

The World in 2025

The Academy hosted a discussion about pressing issues facing the world in 2025. The event featured Kwame Anthony Appiah (New York University), Michael Froman (Council on Foreign Relations), and Adam Tooze (Columbia University) in conversation with Anne-Marie Slaughter (New America). Academy President Laurie L. Patton delivered the opening remarks. Transcript and video online.


Bulletin
|
Feb 20, 2026

Induction 2025: Opening Celebration

Induction Weekend 2025 began with an Opening Celebration that featured the announcement of the new Legacy Recognition Honorees with a special message from John Legend, followed by a conversation between David M. Rubenstein, Co-Founder and Co-Chairman of The Carlyle Group, and Kenny Leon, Tony Award–winning stage and television director and new member of the Academy. An edited version of their conversation follows.
Bulletin
|
Mar 1, 2000

How to Organize a Rich and Successful Group: Lessons from Natural Experiments in History

On March 31, 1999, Jared Diamond presented a condensed version of his talk on "How to Get Rich."
Bulletin
|
Jun 1, 2015

Replenishing the Innovation Pipeline: The Role of University Research

John L. Hennessy, Ann M. Arvin, Carla J. Shatz, and Peter S. Kim participated in a discussion at Stanford University about the role of university research in the innovation pipeline.
Bulletin
|
Feb 27, 2017

Preserving Intellectual Legacies in the Digital Age

Learning to cope with the transitory nature of information storage and transmission will eventually become a normal feature of
twenty-first-century scholarship. In the worst cases, one wrong click of a mouse button and weeks of research, years of written text, and decades of preservation can be undermined, effectively making the written word as transitory as the spoken one.

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