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American Academy in Berlin

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Phone
  
+49 30 804830

Founded
  
9 September 1994

American Academy in Berlin

Address
  
Am Sandwerder 17-19, 14109 Berlin, Germany

Similar
  
Touro College Berlin, ufaFabrik ‑ Internatio Kultur Ce, Academy of Arts, John F Kennedy for North, Max Planck Institute for the Histor

Profiles

The american academy in berlin at twenty volker schl ndorff


The American Academy in Berlin is a research and cultural institution in Berlin whose stated mission is to foster a greater understanding and dialogue between the people of the United States and the people of Germany. The American Academy was founded in September 1994 by a group of prominent Americans and Germans, among them its founding chairman Richard Holbrooke, Henry Kissinger, Richard von Weizsäcker, Fritz Stern and Otto Graf Lambsdorff. It opened in 1998. The organization is funded by private donations, with support coming from individuals as well as corporations and foundations on both sides of the Atlantic. The German weekly magazine Der Spiegel has called the Academy “the world's most important center for American intellectual life outside the US.”

Contents

The American Academy in Berlin is located in the Hans Arnhold Center in a villa on the shores of the Wannsee, a lake within the identically-named district in the southwestern part of Berlin. It was the home of banker and cultural leader Hans Arnhold and his family before they were forced to emigrate to the United States in the 1930s. It was then appropriated and occupied by Walther Funk, the Minister of Economics of the Third Reich and later president of the Reichsbank. After the Arnhold family regained ownership, the villa was sold to the Federal Republic of Germany in 1958. Being located in the American Zone of occupation after World War II, it was used as a recreation center by the U.S. Army and as a meeting center for political officials and Americans until after the fall of the Berlin Wall. The American Academy in Berlin also maintains an office in New York City.

Berlin Prize Fellowship

The American Academy in Berlin awards the Berlin Prize Fellowship to Americans in the fields of arts, literature, humanities, politics, economics, law, and composition. Usually 12 fellows are in residence at the Hans Arnhold Center for one academic semester. The Berlin Prize includes a monthly stipend, partial board, and residence at the Academy’s Hans Arnhold Center. In addition, the organization provides short-term stipends for visiting Americans such as Paul Krugman, Arthur Miller, James Wolfensohn, Tom Daschle, Samuel Nunn, and Justice Stephen Breyer.

  • 2015: Evgeny Morozov
  • 2015: Jeffrey Goldberg
  • 2014: Jonathan Lethem
  • 2014: Beatriz Colomina
  • 2013: Andrew J. Nathan
  • 2012 and 2013: Béatrice Longuenesse
  • 2011: Adam Haslett
  • 2011: Susan McCabe
  • 2010: Anne Hull
  • 2009: George Packer
  • 2008: Ha Jin
  • Henry A. Kissinger Prize

    Since 2007 the Henry A. Kissinger Prize has been awarded annually to a European or American who has made a lasting contribution to bettering the transatlantic relationship. Previous recipients of the prize are former German chancellor Helmut Schmidt (2007); 41st President of the United States of America George H. W. Bush (2008); former President of the Federal Republic of Germany Richard von Weizsäcker (2009); New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg (2010); and former German chancellor Helmut Kohl (2011).

    Publications

    The American Academy's house magazine, The Berlin Journal, contains a range of articles, opinion pieces, fiction, art, and poetry by fellows and distinguished visitors.

    Richard C. Holbrooke Forum

    The Richard C. Holbrooke Forum brings together international scholars, policy experts, and government officials in a series of workshops to discuss some of the most intractable problems in modern diplomacy. Its core themes are: Statecraft and Values; Enduring Crisis of Governance; Dynamics of Transformation; and Securing the Peace: Post-Conflict Coexistence and Reconciliation.

    References

    American Academy in Berlin Wikipedia