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Bulletin
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Aug 30, 2022

Dædalus Explores the Public Faces of the Humanities

By Jessica Taylor, Louis W. Cabot Fellow in Humanities Policy at the Academy, and Robert B. Townsend, Director of Humanities, Arts, and Culture Programs at the Academy and Codirector of the Humanities Indicators
Bulletin
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May 14, 2024

Understanding Chinese and Russian Views on U.S. Missile Defense

In today’s world—characterized by great-power competition and ongoing crises in Europe, East Asia, and the Middle East—missile defense, previously a Cold War concern, has resurfaced as a prominent issue. State and non-state actors are relying on missile capabilities to achieve their military objectives. This article explores how missile strikes and missile threats are shaping new and ongoing global tensions.
Members of the Commission on Accelerating Climate Action stand in a grassy park in Miami’s Little River neighborhood while on a walking tour led by staff at the Miami-Dade County Office of Resilience.
Bulletin
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Jul 31, 2024

Climate Action Has Accelerated but There Is More Work to Be Done

The conversation about climate change has evolved dramatically over the past three years. Since the Academy’s Board of Directors issued a public statement on climate change and the Academy’s Commission on Accelerating Climate Action began, public opinion and legislative measures have shifted toward more significant climate solutions.
Bulletin
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Jan 1, 2001

Educating the Children of the World

The Academy proposes the formation of a task force to examine the rationale, means, and consequences of achieving universal basic and secondary education (UBASE) -that is, an education of high quality for all the world's children from age 6 to 16. We hope that an ambitious program of action-oriented research will lead to the development of a global plan of action for UBASE and its subsequent implementation.
In the News
|
Nov 30, 2017

A Call to Reform Undergraduate Education

Major study by American Academy of Arts and Sciences seeks change in curriculum and assessment, commitment to funding public higher education, new ideas about the faculty role, and more.
Source
Inside Higher Ed
Bulletin
|
Jul 1, 2012

Noteworthy

Bulletin
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Aug 7, 2019

Dædalus Explores Processes of Inequality

Rising inequality is one of our most pressing social concerns. And it is not simply that some are advantaged while others are not, but that structures of inequality are self-reinforcing and cumulative; they become durable. The societal arrangements that in the past have produced more equal economic outcomes and social opportunities – such as expanded mass education, access to social citizenship and its benefits, and wealth redistribution – have often been attenuated and supplanted by processes that are instead inequality-inducing.
Press Release
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Jul 1, 2019

New Issue of Dædalus Explores Processes of Inequality

The Summer 2019 issue of Daedalus, “Inequality as a Multidimensional Process,” guest edited by Michèle Lamont and Paul Pierson, draws on a wide range of expertise to better understand and examine how economic conditions are linked to other social, psychological, political, and cultural processes that can either counteract or reinforce durable inequalities.
Bulletin
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Aug 22, 2016

Russia Beyond Putin

Timothy J. Colton and George Breslauer gave a presentation on “Russia Beyond Putin,” the subject of the upcoming Spring 2017 issue of Dædalus.
Bulletin
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Feb 27, 2017

Appreciating Biological Variation

"Much of the biological variability I encountered in my childhood stays vividly with me now and very much forms part of my ongoing research drive."
Bulletin
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Jul 1, 2012

The Getty Center: Research, Conservation, and Collections

Bulletin
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Aug 22, 2016

An Embrace of Africa

"In 1956, while working in the summer as a fledgling reporter for the then family-owned Hartford Courant, I persuaded the editors to let me write what turned out to be a seven-part series exposing the extent of housing segregation in 'liberal' Hartford."
Bulletin
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Jul 1, 2012

Academy News

News about Academy events and projects, including the Commission on the Humanities and Social Sciences and the Global Nuclear Future initiative, as well as new research and publications.
Our Common Purpose: Reinventing American Democracy for the 21st Century
Bulletin
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Aug 7, 2020

Reinventing American Democracy for the 21st Century

On June 11, 2020, the Academy’s Commission on the Practice of Democratic Citizenship celebrated the release of its final report: Our Common Purpose: Reinventing American Democracy for the 21st Century. Nearly 1,200 people viewed the launch event, which featured Commission Chairs Danielle Allen (Harvard University), Stephen Heintz (Rockefeller Brothers Fund), and Eric Liu (Citizen University); Academy President David Oxtoby; as well as Commission members Judy Woodruff (PBS NewsHour) and David Brooks (The New York Times).
Bulletin
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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
|
Apr 24, 2026

How Does Knowledge Survive?

On a gray London morning in January, I walked past familiar markers of institutional gravity on my way to the Royal Society. Stone facades. Heavy doors. Plaques engraved with names that have outlived the controversies of their eras. It is easy, in places like this, to slip into a kind of historical reverence that feels comforting, even anesthetizing.
Bulletin
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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
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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
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Jun 1, 2015

Mr g–The Story of Creation as Told by God

The Academy’s 2017th Stated Meeting on February 11, 2015, featured members of the Catalyst Collaborative@MIT performing a staged reading of Mr g, a novel by Alan Lightman. Mr g is the story of creation as narrated by God (Mr g). In it, Mr g’s uncle Deva and aunt Penelope give him advice as he sets about creating the universe; he also spars with a Satan-like character about various ethical and philosophical issues raised by his creation, especially when intelligent life emerges.
Bulletin
|
Jan 1, 2012

Noteworthy

Pagination

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