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  • Projects (27)
  • Publications (230)
Bulletin
|
Feb 10, 2020

Humanities Indicators Project Explores the Public Humanities

While much of the discussion about the state of the humanities tends to focus on the declining number of students majoring in the humanities, the health of the field relies on a much wider array of practices. The American Academy’s Humanities Indicators project has been exploring this wider frame of humanities activity by compiling data from federal sources and conducting the first national survey about the health of the field.
Bulletin
|
May 11, 2017

Communicating Scientific Facts in an Age of Uncertainty

As the Academy continues to look at issues related to public perceptions of risk, uncertainty, and scientific research through its Public Face of Science initiative, it partnered with the University of Chicago to organize a public symposium on “Communicating Scientific Facts in an Age of Uncertainty.” The symposium featured presentations by Olufunmilayo I. Olopade and Arthur Lupia.
Publication |
Daedalus

The nuclear “renaissance” & preventing the spread of enrichment & reprocessing technologies: a Russian view

Publication |
Daedalus

Water for Bongo: Creative Adaptation, Resilience & Dar es Salaam’s Water Supply

Translators work in a booth as delegates listen to speeches during the opening session of the Belt and Road Forum on Legal Cooperation in Beijing on July 2.
In the News
|
Aug 6, 2018

Americans are losing out because so few speak a second language

Leon Panetta, former Secretary of Defense, echoes the recommendations of Academy report on language learning, saying "we are constrained by our inadequate understanding of other nations and peoples, and by our inability to communicate effectively with them."
Source
San Francisco Chronicle
Publication |
Daedalus

Water Security in Africa in the Age of Global Climate Change

Publication |
Daedalus

Democracy, Religion & Public Reason

Publication |
Daedalus

Education for all: an unfinished revolution

Publication |
Daedalus

Northwestern University in Qatar: A Distinctive Global University

Founded in 2008 through a partnership between Northwestern University and Qatar Foundation for Education, Science and Community Development (QF), Northwestern University in Qatar (NU-Q) educates creative, ethi-cal, and impactful communicators, and contributes both to Northwestern’s excellence and the rise of Qatar as a knowledge-based society. NU-Q’s vision is multidisciplinary, multimodal, multilingual, and focused on the Global South as an intellectual and creative space for research and teaching. NU-Q positions itself as an “em-bedded institution” in which U.S. higher education overlaps with regional and “Southern” circuits of academic exchange that catalyze critical debates on enduring and emerging issues, and enables a relationship between the university and the world that is globally competitive and locally resonant. NU-Q is a distinctive university dedi-cated to that vision.
Bulletin
|
Aug 22, 2016

The Regulatory and Ethical Dimensions of Human Performance Enhancement

For centuries, humans have sought to enhance their natural appearance and abilities through medicine, surgery, exercise, and education. Today, performance enhancement is most often associated with drugs taken by athletes and college students to improve physical and mental performance.
Publication |
Daedalus

Computational Frameworks for Human Care

forest floor fire image from iStock  ​
Bulletin
|
Jun 3, 2022

Communication to Spur Climate Action: A New Commission Gathers Information

On June 21, 2018, meteorologist Jeff Berardelli printed an image representing global temperature change onto a tie and wore it on a CBS broadcast. Other meteorologists followed his lead, and on the first day of summer every year since, broadcasters have used these ties and similar pins and necklaces to spark conversations about climate, policy solutions, and local environmental changes.
Press Release
|
Oct 21, 2013

Secretary of Smithsonian Institution to Speak at University of West Georgia

The University of West Georgia College of Arts and Humanities is serving as the statewide host site for discussion on a national report titled “The Heart of the Matter: the Humanities and Social Sciences” conducted by the American Academy of Arts & Sciences Commission on the Humanities and Social Sciences.
Publication |
Daedalus

Constraining Bureaucracy Beyond Judicial Review

Publication |
Daedalus

Civil War & the Global Threat of Pandemics

Publication |
Daedalus

The Quest for Educational Equity in Mexico

I examine the dynamics of implementing at-scale reforms to provide meaningful educational opportunities to disadvantaged students in Mexico. To effectively reduce social inequality and exclusion, education policies need a mix of system-wide and targeted efforts that are implemented at scale and sustained long enough to become institutionalized. The resiliency of those policies requires an elusive balance between system-wide and targeted efforts, alignment between federal and state initiatives, and supportive politics. However, the politics of implementing system-wide reforms are more contentious than those involving targeted efforts because they disrupt entrenched interests, making such efforts harder to sustain. Targeted policies, while easier to implement, reinforce the segregation of students into different educational tracks of varying quality.
Publication |
Daedalus

Multicultural Environmental Ethics

Roundtable discussion at Academy summit on Civil Justice
Bulletin
|
Jul 31, 2024

Making Justice Accessible Summit

In a single year, 55 million Americans might face 260 million legal problems, such as fighting eviction threats from landlords, dealing with overwhelming medical bills from an unexpected illness that could lead to bankruptcy, or seeking assistance to escape abusive domestic situations. Yet only some Americans recognize that these problems are matters of civil justice. And even fewer have access to available, afford­able, and quality legal support needed to resolve these problems. This is the civil justice gap: the disparity between the legal needs of Americans and the resources available to meet those needs.
Bulletin
|
Feb 12, 2014

On the Arts and Sciences: Presentations by Ken Burns and Ernest J. Moniz

As part of the 2013 Induction weekend, Ken Burns (President of Florentine Films) and Ernest J. Moniz (U.S. Secretary of Energy) spoke about the challenges and opportunities for the arts and the sciences.
Publication |
Daedalus

Disrupted Institutional Pathways for Educational Equity in Conflict-Affected Nations

Areas and systems affected by compounded crises, protracted conflicts, and structural violence often struggle to reform education for social reconstruction. At the forefront, we observe tireless and ambitious ventures among donor agencies, government institutions, and international and local organizations. However, in many of these cases, we also witness deepening political gridlock, stagnation, and marginalization that undermine the progress of an empowering education for citizenship that upholds principles of human rights. Causal factors to these institutional failures are often either overlooked, redacted, or undocumented in research. Evidence from Morocco, Iraqi Kurdistan, and, most of all, Lebanon illustrates the extent to which governance systems in education can either hinder or even prevent equity in education.

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