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Bulletin
|
Feb 27, 2025

Induction 2024: Opening Celebration

Induction Weekend 2024 began with an Opening Celebration that featured the first Legacy Recognition Honorees and a performance led by new member bassist Rodney Whitaker. The program also included a conversation between David M. Rubenstein, Co-Founder and Co-Chairman of The Carlyle Group, and Grant Hill, a new member, basketball hall-of-famer, and philanthropist. An edited version of their conversation follows.
In the News
|
Nov 5, 2018

Indiana University explores international education issues at symposium

In his keynote address, Academy President Jonathan Fanton emphasized the need for colleges and universities to do more to spread awareness about the positive impact of language and area studies.
Source
Indiana University Newsroom
Six colorful images of the Capitol building.
Press Release
|
Oct 9, 2025

Publication on Expanding Representation in Congress Issued

A new publication, which emerged from the Academy's Our Common Purpose work, proposes alternatives to the “winner-take-all” system used in most U.S. elections. The proposed alternatives have the potential to reduce partisan divides and virtually eliminate gerrymandering.
Press Release
|
Jun 9, 2008

Examining the History of Competition for Supremacy in Space

The United States is spending tens of billions of dollars annually – far more than all other countries combined – to acquire advanced military space capabilities. However, for technical and economic reasons, that investment is unlikely to yield the government’s stated military goals.
Shield of the American Academy of Arts & Sciences featuring Minerva with shield.
Press Release
|
Apr 22, 2026

New Members Elected in 2026: Fitting Recognition of America's 250th

Building on America’s 250-year-old commitment to knowledge, the American Academy of Arts & Sciences announces the leaders in academia, the arts, industry, journalism, philanthropy, policy, research, and science elected in 2026.

Press Release
|
Apr 2, 2023

Maxine Hong Kingston Awarded Literature Medal

Maxine Hong Kingston is awarded the Academy’s Emerson-Thoreau medal, which was first given to Robert Frost in 1958 and has since been presented to other notable authors such as T.S. Eliot, Hannah Arendt, Norman Mailer, Toni Morrison, and Margaret Atwood.
A group of 37 adults in business casual attire pose together for a photo taken from an elevated angle with everyone smiling up at the camera. The subjects in the photo are standing in a space with tiled flooring and white columns with wooden trim.
Academy Article
|
Apr 29, 2026

Takeaways: Education and Healthcare Employer Partnerships in Boston

What are the lessons learned when community college leaders, researchers, area employers, policymakers and philanthropists get together to discuss how to provide postsecondary students with the skills they need for meaningful employment?
In the News
|
Dec 12, 2019

The Process Due: A Multidisciplinary Examination of the Devastating and Persistent Crisis in Legal Services

"Access to Justice," the Fall 2019 issue of Daedalus, is only the first of several efforts sponsored by the Academy to gather information about the national need for improved legal access, study innovations piloted around the country to fill this need, and advance a set of clear, national recommendations for closing the justice gap.
Source
Judicature
Bulletin
|
Aug 22, 2017

On Free Speech and Academic Freedom

Free speech makes no distinction about quality; academic freedom does. Are all opinions equally valid in a university classroom? Joan Wallach Scott speaks about academic freedom after accepting the Talcott Parsons Prize.
Bulletin
|
Feb 19, 2021

A Conversation with Astronaut Jessica Meir

NASA astronaut Jessica Meir made history in October 2019 when she participated in the first all-female spacewalk. After 205 days in the isolation of space, she returned to a planet experiencing its own form of isolation: the global COVID-19 pandemic. As an astronaut and a marine biologist, Dr. Meir’s research into the impact of extreme environments has brought her to the depths of the Antarctic and the heights of space. At a virtual program, hosted by the Academy’s San Diego Program Committee, Dr. Meir described her research and her experiences in space and participated in a conversation with Brian Keating (University of California San Diego) about the perspectives that her work provides about our world.
Press Release
|
Mar 16, 2006

Birgeneau, Hennessy and Lucas to Receive Founders Awards From the Academy

The leaders of three of the Bay Area's premiere higher education and creative institutions are being recognized for their contributions to California and the nation by the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Portrait of Andrea Ghez with photo credit to Nobel Foundation.
Press Release
|
Feb 21, 2025

Andrea M. Ghez, Renowned Astrophysicist, Receives Rumford Prize

Andrea Ghez – a Nobel laureate and Professor of Physics and Astronomy at UCLA – is receiving the Rumford Prize, a storied science award given by the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. She is being honored pioneering research on the supermassive black hole at the center of our galaxy that has revolutionized our understanding of the cosmos.

Bulletin
|
May 11, 2017

A Renewal of Evangelical Scholarship

One of the most notable developments in American academic life of the past sixty years has been intellectual renewal where it might have been least expected: among evangelical Christians.
Bulletin
|
Jan 1, 2001

Poetry Reading by Heather McHugh and Paul Muldoon

Brief introductions and readings from poet Heather McHugh of the University of Washington and poet Paul Muldoon of Princeton University.
Bulletin
|
Mar 1, 2000

Study Group on Intervention, Sovereignty, and International Security

Press Release
|
Nov 18, 2005

Bryan, Franke and Randel to Receive Founders Awards from the American Academy

Three leaders of cultural, civic and higher education institutions are being recognized for their contributions to Chicago and the nation by the 225-year-old American Academy of Arts and Sciences. On Saturday, November 19, as part of a program on Shapers of the New Chicago, the three leaders – John Bryan, Richard Franke and Don Michael Randel – are to receive special Founders Awards from the Academy.
Bulletin
|
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
|
Dec 9, 2020

American Institutions, Society & the Public Good

Since its founding, projects that work to bolster Americans’ engagement with government institutions have been a hallmark of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Our charter states that the “end and design” of the American Academy is to “cultivate every art and science which may tend to advance the interest, honor, dignity, and happiness of a free, independent, and virtuous people.” Today, this effort involves projects designed to develop innovative solutions to problems facing American society in the twenty-first century. Projects in this area interpret the term “institutions” broadly, focusing on all of the constituent elements of government, civic culture, and civil society. These projects address how individual citizens interact with social structures, how these experiences prepare people to make a positive contribution to a diverse America, and how these institutions are evolving. The Academy shares this research through publications, convenings, and active outreach.
Bulletin
|
Feb 10, 2020

A Conversation with Anna Deavere Smith

Anna Deavere Smith is many things: an actress, playwright, author, and founding director of the Institute on the Arts and Civic Dialogue at New York University, where she is also University Professor at Tisch School of the Arts. In 2019, she became a member of the Academy and was a featured speaker at the Annual David M. Rubenstein Lecture held during the Induction weekend. After performing two original pieces that combine art, commentary, and journalism, she joined David M. Rubenstein in conversation. Their discussion explored a wide range of topics, from auditions and growing up in Baltimore to memorization and the school-to-prison pipeline.
Press Release
|
Sep 13, 2005

American Academy Releases New Volume on Democracy and Security in Post-Soviet Georgia

In November 2003 the people of the former Soviet state of Georgia forced a revolutionary change in leadership to establish a new government under President Mikhail Saakashvili. “Statehood and Security: Georgia after the Rose Revolution,” a new book from the American Academy, analyzes the security problems that confront this new government and the greater Caucasus region.

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