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 Perhitungan Biaya Pagar Dorong Rel Atas Terpercaya Salatiga”

Search

  • All (5224)
  • Events (279)
  • (-) News (1256)
  • People (2126)
  • Projects (59)
  • Publications (1504)
Bulletin
|
Dec 5, 2022

Prizes and Prizewinners

Prizes and Prizewinners
Bulletin
|
Nov 29, 2024

Science, Engineering & Technology

Academy projects in Science, Engineering, and Technology seek to strengthen the capacity of science and engineering to improve the human condition. This goal has never been more important for the nation or for the world than it is today. Global challenges increasingly require collaboration across disciplinary, professional, and national boundaries. Likewise, rapid advances in information processing and transmission raise new issues for the management of scientific knowledge and for action on new discoveries.
Bulletin
|
May 14, 2024

Anti-Globalism’s Past and Present

On March 20, 2024, the Academy’s University of Chicago Program Committee hosted an evening with historian Tara Zahra. Informed by her archival research and the themes in her most recent book, Against the World: Anti-Globalism and Mass Politics Between the World Wars, Professor Zahra discussed how the forces of early-twentieth-century global instability—the Spanish flu, the Great Depression, ethnonationalism, the development of both democracies and dictatorships—can help us better understand our own contemporary political moment. Following her presentation, she joined Academy President David W. Oxtoby in a conversation about the past, present, and future of our interconnected, yet increasingly divided, world. John Mark Hansen, a member of the Academy’s Board of Directors, opened the program. The event was organized as a Jonathan F. Fanton Lecture, in honor of the past president of the Academy whose career has been dedicated to solving global issues. Jonathan F. Fanton and his wife Cynthia were in attendance. An edited version of Professor Zahra’s remarks and her conversation with President Oxtoby follows.
Bulletin
|
Dec 10, 2025

Prizes and Prizewinners

Academy Prizes
Bulletin
|
Feb 27, 2017

A Scientist’s Work on Vaccines

In 1980, I began my fellowship in pediatric infectious diseases at the Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia. My mentor was Dr. Stanley Plotkin: the inventor of the RA27/3 strain of rubella vaccine – the one that by 2005 had eliminated the disease from the United States.
In the News
|
Mar 1, 2017

Same Topic, Different Tongue: the American Academy Report on Language Learning

At the National Press Club, members of the Academy's language commission met for a public discussion of their answers. Commission member Rubén Rumbaut, offered the core of the commission’s framing, “Ironically, despite the diversity of American languages, the United States has acquired the dubious designation of being a language graveyard...we have immigrants and children of immigrants not passing on their language skills.”
Source
Ed Central
Bulletin
|
Feb 27, 2025

Noteworthy

Select Prizes and Awards to Members
Bulletin
|
Nov 29, 2024

Prizes and Prizewinners

Recent Prizes and Prizewinners
Bulletin
|
Feb 19, 2021

Telling our Regional Story: The Narratives that Unite and Divide in North Carolina

A challenge facing the United States is how to combine the good and bad of our history into shared narratives. Telling Our Nation’s Story, one of the recommendations of the Academy’s Commission on the Practice of Democratic Citizenship, calls for communities to work toward a common narrative by engaging in honest conversations about the past in order to reckon with what divides us while uncovering what unites us. Participants in this virtual program brought a regional approach to a conversation across the Research Triangle.
Bulletin
|
Aug 20, 2015

Noteworthy

Bulletin
|
Dec 1, 2023

Prizes and Prizewinners

Prizes and Prizewinners
Bulletin
|
Jul 1, 2012

The Getty Center: Research, Conservation, and Collections

In the News
|
Apr 15, 2023

Pros and Cons of Expanding the House

Interest in enlarging the House of Representatives - a recommendation included in the Academy's Our Common Purpose report - is growing and there are now two legislative proposals seeking to enlarge the House to increase responsiveness and representation.
Source
Congressional Digest
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.
Bulletin
|
Dec 9, 2020

Academy Publications

Academy Publications
In the News
|
Oct 18, 2017

Why we still need to study the humanities in a STEM world

Private and public pushes to increase STEM education have given rise to new concerns about the value of a liberal arts education. Humanities Indicators reports that the number of bachelor’s degrees in the humanities that were earned in 2015 was down nearly 10 percent from three years earlier.
Source
The Washington Post
Press Release
|
May 31, 2020

The Benefits of International Scientific Collaboration - Project and Statement

During a pandemic, science policy leaders researching international collaboration urge support for international partnerships. They say science is inherently global and, when it comes to our biggest problems, the solutions are global too.
Press Release
|
Jan 15, 2004

Symposium: "Have You No Sense of Decency?" McCarthyism 50 years later

Press Release
|
Dec 8, 2015

American Academy of Arts and Sciences Awards Sarton Prize to Vanesha Pravin

Poet recognized for exceptional talent, promise
BULLETIN ISSUE

Summer 2025 Bulletin

Pagination

  • Previous page ←
  • 47 of 63
  • 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