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  • All (1659)
  • Events (9)
  • (-) News (789)
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  • Publications (612)
In the News
|
Feb 11, 2025

How to Rescue Your Slumping Humanities Program

How the English department at Washington University at St. Louis reversed its enrollment slide and reinvigorated graduate training.
Source
Chronicle of Higher Education
In the News
|
Apr 26, 2023

The next level of AI is approaching. Our democracy isn't ready.

Danielle Allen assesses the threats that new AI tools may pose to American democracy.
Source
Washington Post
In the News
|
Nov 28, 2023

Opinion: Ask not what can be done with a humanities degree

Ann Ardis writes, "The workforce data in this new American Academy of Arts & Sciences report is the perfect complement to individual storytelling in helping today’s humanities majors think through 'What are you going to do with that?'"
Source
The Hechinger Report
Image of General James N Mattis from Oct 2023 Event Video
Academy Article
|
Oct 5, 2023

General Mattis, Civics Education, and National Security

The Academy partnered with iCivics to host a virtual panel event featuring General Jim Mattis, Louise Dube, and Danielle Allen on the link between civics education and national security.
Press Release
|
Dec 14, 2009

Three Foundations Award $1.6 Million in Grants to American Academy’s Global Nuclear Future Initiative

Three of the nation’s leading private foundations have awarded funds totaling more than $1.6 million to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences to support its initiative on the Global Nuclear Future.
Baker in Tulare County from Faces of America Photojournal
Press Release
|
Nov 9, 2023

New Report, Recommendations, and Metrics for Reimagining Our Economy

The Commission on Reimagining Our Economy issues final report and new dashboard in its efforts to advance an American economy that is centered on working for the people who make it work.
Press Release
|
Sep 8, 2009

American Academy Convenes Online Dialogue on the Health-Care Crisis

Press Release
|
Apr 19, 2021

Academy Receives $1M Grant from the Rockefeller Brothers Fund to Strengthen Democracy

The American Academy of Arts & Sciences has received a $1 million grant from the Rockefeller Brothers Fund to advance the recommendations in Our Common Purpose from ideas to implementation.
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.
In the News
|
Nov 14, 2023

The Humanities As a Theory of Change

This profile of Ruth Simmons - a visionary higher education leader and Academy member - emphasizes the role of the humanities in shaping Simmons as a thinker and leader, and explores the significance of the humanities for others. Author Antoinette Burton cites a recent Academy report on career outcomes of humanities majors.
Source
Public Seminar
Small group discussion with people seated in chairs.
In the News
|
Jul 24, 2025

Building Civic Bridges Act, Legislation Inspired by Our Common Purpose, Reintroduced in Congress

The bipartisan Building Civic Bridges Act was reintroduced for consideration during the 119th Congress. The legislation, which aims to heal political polarization within communities, was initially introduced for consideration during the 117th Congress and was inspired in part by recommendations in the Academy’s Our Common Purpose report.
Press Release
|
Oct 7, 2021

Academy Receives Major Gift from Joan and Irwin Jacobs to Advance Democracy in America

The American Academy of Arts & Sciences has received a $5 million gift from Irwin and Joan Jacobs to advance the recommendations proposed by the Academy’s crosspartisan Commission on the Practice of Democratic Citizenship. The new resources will help the Academy pursue its comprehensive multi-year implementation plan leading up to the nation’s 250th anniversary.
Bulletin
|
Jul 1, 2012

Remembering H.M.

Image of Commission Cochair Professor Katherine Cramer
In the News
|
Nov 9, 2023

Making an American economy that works for the people

Profile of Kathy Cramer, professor of political science at the University of Wisconsin–Madison, and her leadership of the Academy's Commission on Reimagining Our Economy and the work to advance an American economy that works for its people.
Source
University of Wisconsin-Madison News
Bulletin
|
Feb 10, 2022

From the President

Building a more just society has become a unifying theme for much of the Academy’s work, and we are addressing issues of justice and equality as they relate to our past, present, and future.
Photograph of Claudia Goldin
Press Release
|
Feb 25, 2026

Claudia Goldin to Receive Talcott Parsons Prize

Economic historian and labor economist Claudia Goldin is receiving the the Talcott Parsons Prize from the American Academy of Arts & Sciences. She has done trailblazing research, analysis, and writing exploring the role of women within the U.S. economy and globally. The prize, first awarded in 1974, honors sociologist Talcott Parsons, a former president of the Academy.
Large group of people standing for photo after participating at Making Justice Accessible Summit.
Academy Article
|
May 23, 2024

Lessons from the Civil Justice Summit

As part of its Making Justice Accessible project, the American Academy of Arts & Sciences hosted a summit in March 2024 to bring together a diverse group of participants to address the civil justice gap.
Academy Article
|
Nov 1, 2019

Arts Commission Explores the Integration of Arts, Humanities, and STEM

In a daylong symposium, the American Academy's Commission on the Arts explored the integration of arts, humanities, and STEM in higher education.
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.
Bulletin
|
Jun 3, 2022

Strengthening International Cooperative Reponses to Pandemics

Wars and conflicts in the twenty-first century are putting tremendous strain on the strategies traditionally used by humanitarian responders to help those in need, particularly strategies that deliver effective health responses. Recent civil wars not only account for a larger proportion of ongoing conflicts, but they have become more protracted with more actors with fragmented affiliations. Some of the world’s deadliest places are not formally war zones but areas of extreme political and criminal violence, such as in Venezuela, Mexico, Guatemala, and El Salvador. Providing humanitarian aid amid urban warfare calls for strategies that are different from the ones used in rural settings, where humanitarians have commonly operated in the past. Ruthless deliberate attacks on hospitals, schools, and civilians, as well as sexual and gender-based violence, form part of many of these twenty-first-century conflicts. Humanitarian health workers and health facilities are at growing risk of attack as the normative and legal framework that has traditionally regulated war has become less protective. Geopolitical rivalry and perceptions of a weakening commitment to humanitarian norms are further undermining traditional humanitarian approaches. At the same time, the risk of infectious diseases of pandemic potential intersects with conflict-related health and humanitarian needs, presenting additional challenges for humanitarians.

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