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American Academy of Political and Social Science

 
Wikipedia: American Academy of Political and Social Science
 

The American Academy of Political and Social Science was founded in 1889 to promote progress in the social sciences. Sparked by Professor Edmund J. James[1] and drawing from members of the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania, Swarthmore College, and Bryn Mawr College, the Academy sought to establish communication between scientific thought and practical effort.[2] The goal of its founders was to foster, across disciplines, important questions in the realm of social sciences, and to promote the work of those whose research aimed to address important social problems. Today the AAPSS is headquartered at the Fels Institute of Government at the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia and aims to continue to offer interdisciplinary perspectives on important social issues.

Contents

Establishment

The primary modes of communication were to be the bimonthly journal, The Annals,[3], annual meetings, symposia, and special publications. Difficult topics were not avoided. The 1901 annual meeting was on race relations in America,[4] and included a paper by Booker T. Washington.[5]

Membership was open and inclusive[2] with emphasis on intelligent inquiry, women were included in the initial membership.[4] The Academy's members have included not only academicians, but distinguished public servants such as Herbert Hoover and Francis Perkins.[2] Perhaps for this reason, it is not a member of the American Council of Learned Societies.[4][6] Nevertheless in 2000 the Academy began selecting and installing Fellows in recognition of social scientists who have made outstanding contributions to the field.[7]

Presidents of the Academy

  • 1889-1895 - Edmund J. James
  • 1896-1900 - Roland P. Falkner (acting in the absence of Edmund J. James)
  • 1900-1902 - Samuel McCune Lindsay
  • 1902-1929 - Leo S. Rowe
  • 1930-1952 - Ernest M. Patterson
  • 1953–1970 - James C. Charlesworth
  • 1970–1972 - Richard D. Lambert
  • 1972–1998 - Marvin E. Wolfgang
  • 1998–1999 - Kathleen Hall Jamieson
  • 1999–2001 - Jaroslav Pelikan
  • 2001–2005 - Lawrence W. Sherman
  • 2006–present - Douglas S. Massey

Publications

The Annals

The Annals, a policy and scientific journal in political and social science, began publication in July 1890 and continues to this day (2007). Authors and special editors of The Annals have included influential individuals, such as Eleanor Roosevelt, Theodore Roosevelt, W. E. B. Du Bois, Margaret Mead, Thurgood Marshall, Mahatma Gandhi, and Booker T. Washington.[2] The Annals has been published by SAGE Publications since 1981. In 2003 it changed from its traditional plain orange cover to including photographs.[7]

'The Annals has covered topics ranging from “The World’s Food” (November, 1917) to “The Motion Picture and its Economic and Social Aspects” (November 1926), “Women in the Modern World” (May, 1929), “America and Japan” (May, 1941), “Urban Renewal Goals and Standards (March, 1964), and “The Global Refugee Problem” (May, 1982). More recent volumes have focused on such topics as “Confronting the Specter of Nuclear Terrorism,” and “Race, Ethnicity and Inequality in the U.S. Labor Market."

Editors

Academy Blog

In 2006, the Academy Blog[8] was created to take advantage of the Internet to provide a forum for ideas and research in the social sciences.

Notes

  1. ^ Falkner, Roland P. (1896) "Editorial" Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 7: pp. 74-77
  2. ^ a b c d "About the Academy: History" American Academy of Political and Social Science
  3. ^ Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science ISSN 0002-7162
  4. ^ a b c Lara, Antonio and Rich, Paul (2003) "The American Academy of Political and Social Science in the Twenty-First Century" Special publication American Academy of Political and Social Science
  5. ^ Lindsay, Samuel McCune (1901) "Report of the Academy Committee on Meetings. Fifth Annual Meeting of the American Academy of Political and Social Science. Philadelphia, April 12 and 13, 1901" Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 18: pp. 181-187
  6. ^ "ACLS Constituent Learned Societies" American Council of Learned Societies
  7. ^ a b Pearson, Robert W. (2003) "A New Look at The American Academy of Political and Social Science" Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 585(Higher Education in the Twenty-First Century): pp. 6-7, p.7
  8. ^ AAPSS Blog

External links

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