[2002] Accomodating Interdisciplinarity in the Academic
Research Environment AAAS Annual Meeting Boston, MA [Synopsis]
[2004] Leading the Changing University
Research Environment AAAS Annual Meeting Seattle, WA [Speakers]
Not exact matches
[BOX 10] Committee on Minority Representation in Science, 1970 - 1973 Opportunities in Science Department Head Files: I, 1974 Opportunities in Science Department Head Files: II, 1972 - 1973 Committee on Opportunities in Science Women's Caucus Ad Hoc Committee of Women, 1972 - 1978 Committee on Industry, Technology and Society Files: I, 1973 - 1974 Committee on Industry, Technology and Society Files: II, 1971 - 1973 Youth Council Files, 1972 - 1973, 1969 - 1971
AAAS Youth Science Program, 1970 - 1981 Youth Council Newsletter, May 1972, October 1971, May 1971 Interim Committee on Arid Lands, 1963 - 1965 Committee on Arid Lands Arid Lands
Research Newsletter, 1963 - 1972 Climate Study Committee Committee on Population and Reproduction Control Committee on Population, Resources, and the
Environment Science, Arms Control, and National Security, Committee on
In the newly reconstituted Scientific Responsibility, Human Rights, and Law Program, the missions of the CSFR and NCLS continue to complement one another as staff pursue projects such as continuing seminars for judges on neuroscience and the law, personalized medicine, the state and future of clinical trials, advocacy in science, understanding responsible
research practices in changing
research environments, and joint
AAAS - China Association of Science and Technology workshops on science and ethics.
The Congressional briefing, «Living at the Extremes: Geoscience
Research at the Coolest Places on Earth,» planned by
AAAS in collaboration with the American Geophysical Union (AGU) in celebration of National Oceans Month, explored the implications that the Earth's poles have for our natural
environment, oceans, and national security.
► This week's issue of Science also includes a brief recap of the 40th annual
AAAS Forum on Science and Technology Policy, attended by «more than 400 elected officials, government and business leaders, researchers, educators, and others» on 30 April and 1 May in Washington, D.C. «The importance of basic
research for the nation's scientific and economic future was a recurring theme,» and «participants delved into the factors driving the tight budget
environment» scientists are currently facing.
After the publication of this work in 2000 (as the
AAAS Atlas of Population and
Environment), Bromley stayed on and helped run international
research projects on environmental issues in Russia and South America, assisting with data compilation, geographic information systems (GIS), and data analysis.
International scientific organizations, such as
AAAS or SPIE, should take the lead in harmonizing these structures in a very collaborative way, as well as the ethical norms and intellectual property policies that surround them, thus making science more accessible to laymen and policy - makers for a purer and standardized global
research environment.
Investigators: Karen Akerlof,
AAAS Visiting Scholar,
Research Assistant Professor, George Mason University and Adjunct Faculty, Johns Hopkins University; Maria Carmen Lemos, Professor and Associate Dean for
Research at University of Michigan School for
Environment and Sustainability; Emily Therese Cloyd, Project Director at
AAAS Center for Public Engagement with Science and Technology; and Erin Heath, Associate Director at
AAAS Office of Government Relations
AAAS joined the leaders of 17 other leading organizations in signing a letter sent 21 October 2009 to the U.S. Senate, emphasizing based upon rigorous
research that human - induced climate change is ongoing and will have broad impacts on society — including the global economy and the
environment.