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  • Publications (387)
Bulletin
|
Feb 19, 2021

Does Meritocracy Destroy the Common Good?

In "The Tyranny of Merit: What’s Become of the Common Good?" Michael J. Sandel argues that the divide between winners and losers has poisoned our politics and pulled us apart. The problem, he contends, is not only that we have failed to live up to the meritocratic ideals we profess, but that a meritocratic society is a flawed aspiration. It produces hubris among the successful and humiliation among those left behind. In the first virtual Stated Meeting in the history of the Academy, Michael J. Sandel joined T. J. Jackson Lears and Anna Deavere Smith in a conversation about his new book and the destructive consequences of linking socioeconomic status with personal worth.
In the News
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May 28, 2016

Dreams Stall as CUNY, New York City’s Engine of Mobility, Sputters

Source
The New York Times
Bulletin
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Aug 22, 2016

Oral Narratives and the Disappearing Past

"Twenty years ago I set out with a Chinese friend and research partner, Gao Xiaoxian, to seek from elderly women in northwest Chinese villages their memories of socialist collectivization in the 1950s. We wanted to hear from them before advancing age and death silenced their stories."
Bulletin
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May 3, 2021

How Are Your Students Doing? New Reports from the Humanities Indicators on the Earnings and Job Outcomes of College Graduates

An examination of the financial advantage earning a bachelor’s degree, in any major, provides over not attaining the degree.
Bulletin
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May 14, 2024

The Geography of American Opportunity

The gap between the richest and poorest communities in the United States has grown significantly, as have differences in population growth, business development, and economic insecurity. The Academy explored this issue with in a conversation with entrepreneur Reid G. Hoffman, sociologist Katherine S. Newman, and founder of End Poverty in California Michael D. Tubbs. The event was inspired by the work of the Academy’s Commission on Reimagining Our Economy and its recommendations to build a people-first economy that ensures no Americans and no communities are left behind.
Bulletin
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Jun 1, 2016

Chiefs: A Perspective from Prehistory on Modern Failing States

There was a time before strong leaders, social inequality, and class systems. Coming of age in the 1960s, my motivation was to understand and hopefully help alter the world of unjust and unstable societies. This personal essay summarizes my career as an archaeologist studying the emergence of complex political systems.
Archives Highlight

Evolution Debates

A protracted debate within the Academy over Darwin’s Origin of Species began with a paper on Japanese flora presented by Asa Gray in 1858, leading to an exchange between Louis Agassiz and William Barton Rogers...
Woman in a Red Apron Wiping Down a Restaurant Table
Bulletin
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Feb 20, 2024

Reimagining Our Economy

As the United States approaches the 2024 presidential election, several journalists and commentators have been puzzled by one question: “Why do Americans seem so unhappy with an economy that appears to be doing so well?” Polls are influenced by many factors, but recent results show how pessimistic many Americans feel about the economy. And yet, judged by traditional economic metrics like the GDP or the Dow Jones, the economy is doing well. How do we explain this paradox?
In the News
|
Nov 19, 2017

“Jihadists” and Religionist Rebels: Responding to the Evolving Profile of Armed Groups

The UN Department of Political Affairs' Politically Speaking magazine interviewed project contributors.
Source
DPA Politically Speaking
Bulletin
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May 3, 2021

New Dædalus Issue Explores Immigration, Nativism & Race

Dysfunctional immigration policies implemented in recent decades have accelerated growth of the Latino population and racialized its members around the trope of illegality. Until 2016, the cultivation of White resentment relied on a dog-whistle politics of racially coded symbolic language, but with the election of Donald Trump, White nationalist sentiments became explicit.
Bulletin
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Nov 29, 2024

Financial Statements

Financial Statements
Bulletin
|
Mar 1, 2000

Gut Reactions: How Caterpillars and People Disarm Alarming Substances with Cytochrome P540

May R. Berenbaum presented at the fall Stated Meeting of the Midwest Center of the American Academy. The talk was a condensed and popularized version of her paper titled "Animal-Plant Warfare: Molecular Basis for Cytochrome P450-Mediated Natural Adaptation."
Press Release
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Nov 7, 2014

Illinois Representatives Support Call for Strengthening Partnerships Among National Labs, Industry & Academia

American Academy of Arts & Sciences leads discussion on “Restoring the Foundation: The Vital Role of Research in Preserving the American Dream”
Bulletin
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Aug 22, 2017

Dædalus explores “The Prospects & Limits of Deliberative Democracy”

Bulletin
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Feb 20, 2024

Becoming Interplanetary and Action for Spaceship Earth

On October 17, 2023, Dava Newman (Director of the MIT Media Lab and former NASA Deputy Administrator) spoke about the MIT Media Lab’s work and the use of vast amounts of data collected by satellites to inform and motivate the public for the fight against climate change. The program included welcoming remarks by Academy President David W. Oxtoby. An edited and condensed version of Dr. Newman’s presentation follows.
A detail of an illustrated storyboard by Shaun Tan showing dejected commuters from the perspective of a passing tram. Hidden among them is a strange winged creature with a lightbulb for a head, representing an alternative to the bleak urban industrial environment.
Press Release
|
Feb 27, 2023

New Daedalus Issue about Creating a New Moral Political Economy

The Winter 2022 issue of Daedalus, "Creating a New Moral Political Economy," explores what it would take to develop an economy that promotes more equal footing across the polity, marketplace, and workplace. Daedalus is an open access publication and all 11 essays and 22 responses are online.
Commission member Leanne Kealoha Fox at podium with climate action report.
Bulletin
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Feb 20, 2024

Forging the Climate Coalition Our Nation Needs

On October 24, 2023, the Academy released Forging Climate Solutions: How to Accelerate Action Across America, the final report of the Commission on Accelerating Climate Action. Prompted by a statement by the Academy’s Board in 2021, the report addresses the need for a climate strategy that breaks through the divisions that characterize politics in the nation today.
Bulletin
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Mar 1, 2023

The Effects of Prolonged War on Democracy

Political scientists, historians, lawyers, policy-makers, anthropologists, and aca­demics as well as retired U.S. military personnel and a Washington, D.C., reserve police officer shared their expertise in militarization, civil-military relations, democratic erosion, gender and security issues, White supremacy movements, and budgeting and public finance to explore the relationships between long-term militarization, extremism, and democracy, both within the United States and abroad.
Bulletin
|
Aug 20, 2015

Causes of Campus Calm: Scaling China's Ivory Tower

Elizabeth J. Perry explains the means by which the Chinese Communist party-state maintains campus calm, despite the many unpopular and potentially unsettling higher education reforms.
An adult sits on the floor beside a backpack. They have pale skin, a thick dark mustache, and short black hair. A person stands behind them and bandages the top of their head. Red can be seen through the bandages. Two other people wait in the background.
Press Release
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May 31, 2023

New Dædalus on Delivering Humanitarian Health Services in Violent Conflicts

The Spring 2023 issue of Dædalus on “Delivering Humanitarian Health Services in Violent Conflicts” features essays, poetry, fiction, and visual art to illuminate the dilemmas facing humanitarian health actors and the potential for innovation in humanitarian health delivery.

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