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 0859 3970 0884 Biaya Pasang Interior Dapur Dan Ruang Makan Paliyan Gunungkidul”

Search

  • All (2425)
  • Events (56)
  • (-) News (616)
  • People (878)
  • Projects (24)
  • Publications (851)
Bulletin
|
Aug 20, 2015

In Memoriam: John David Steinbruner

Janne E. Nolan reflects on John David Steinbruner's life, work, and immeasurable contributions to the Academy.
Bulletin
|
Nov 29, 2024

Global Security & International Affairs

The Global Security and International Affairs program area draws on the expertise of a broad range of policymakers, practitioners, and scholars to foster knowledge and promote innovative and evidence-based policies to address crucial issues affecting the international 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 at all levels of society.
Bulletin
|
Aug 1, 2014

Growing Pains in a Rising China

Press Release
|
Sep 14, 2005

American Academy Appoints 2005 Class of Visiting Scholars

Press Release
|
Oct 19, 2021

Arts Commission: If You Like Art, Support Artists

Academy’s Commission on the Arts issues Art is Work: Policies to Support Creative Workers, recognizing the importance of artists to the national economy
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
|
May 20, 2019

Dædalus Explores Why Jazz Still Matters

Jazz: it has been called both cool and hot, earthy and avant-garde, intellectual and primitive. It is improvisational music touted for the freedom it permits its players, but in its heyday was largely composed and tightly arranged. It tells a story about race in America: not only because African American musicians were so central in its creation and African American audiences so important in their creative responses to it, but because whites played such a dominant role in its dissemination through records and performance venues and its ownership as intellectual and artistic property. But is jazz a relic of the past, or does it continue to have meaning and influence for today’s artists and audiences? And while it may still be present, does it still matter?
Bulletin
|
Aug 20, 2015

Philologia Rediviva?

Sheldon Pollock explores the fate of philology amid far-reaching social and technological developments.
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.


Press Release
|
Feb 14, 2012

Fellows Receive 2011 National Humanities Medal and National Medal of Arts

Press Release
|
Nov 2, 2015

Inaugural Distinguished Morton L. Mandel Annual Public Lecture at American Academy of Arts and Sciences Focuses on Access to U.S. Justice System

Experts in five locations—Berkeley, Cambridge, Chicago, New York, and Washington, D.C.—to lead discussions about legal justice on November 11 as part of the Academy’s inaugural Distinguished Morton L. Mandel Annual Public Lecture.
Bulletin
|
Jan 1, 2000

Rosanna Warren and Galway Kinnell

Bulletin
|
Aug 1, 2014

Intellectual Diversity and The Heart of the Matter

Subra Suresh, President of Carnegie Mellon University, on the report of the Commission on the Humanities and Social Sciences
In the News
|
Mar 18, 2019

Putting the college admissions scandal in context

Sandy Baum and Michael McPherson, members of the Academy's Commission on the Future of Undergraduate Education, write that the recent college admissions scandal represents a small fraction of college admissions and should not distract from persistent inequalities in higher education access.
Source
Brookings
Press Release
|
Oct 4, 2017

New Dædalus Issue on “Civil Wars & Global Disorder: Threats & Opportunities”

Civil wars continue to be a frequent and debilitating phenomenon in international politics. Of the approximately 200 countries in the world, there are currently 30 civil wars underway, including several in which the U.S. military is directly and deeply enmeshed. In the twelve essays in this issue, the authors explore causative factors of civil war, the connection of intrastate strife and transnational terrorism, the limited successes and failed ambitions of intervening powers in the recent past, and the many direct and indirect consequences associated with weak states and civil wars, including the dangers posed by pandemics, mass migrations of people, and great-power proxy warfare.
Bulletin
|
May 14, 2024

Recent Dædalus Issue on Understanding Implicit Bias

How do we counter implicit bias in its individual and systemic manifestations? This question is explored in the Winter 2024 issue of Dædalus by leading scholars, scientists, and policy­makers who examine the science behind implicit bias—the residue of stereotyped associations and social patterns that exists outside our conscious awareness but reinforces inequality in the world.
Press Release
|
Jan 7, 2019

New Issue of Dædalus Takes on the Justice Gap Facing Poor and Low-Income Americans

“Access to Justice,” the Winter 2019 issue of Dædalus, the Journal of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences, is a multidisciplinary exploration of the challenges, costs, and opportunities related to the crisis of limited civil legal services.
Press Release
|
Jul 11, 2014

Dædalus, the Journal of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, Examines “The Invention of Courts”

What challenges confront U.S. courts as democratic institutions in the twenty-first century? And what does the changing role of courts teach us about our conceptions of justice?
Press Release
|
Mar 1, 2023

Political Scientist Robert D. Putnam Receiving Prize from the American Academy of Arts & Sciences

Influential political scientist Robert D. Putnam is awarded the Academy's Talcott Parsons Prize for distinguished and original contributions to the social sciences.
Bulletin
|
Jul 31, 2024

Dædalus Explores Advances & Challenges in International Higher Education

While U.S. colleges struggle against broad disinvestment, institutions of higher education in many parts of the world have imagined ambitious new models of twenty-first-century education. From world-class public research universities to online and binational start-ups, the landscape of global higher education is shaped by ongoing experimentation and change. What have these approaches taught us? And what lessons can we apply to institutions in the United States?

Pagination

  • Previous page ←
  • 24 of 31
  • 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