Science & Society

Our Mission

Science & Society catalyzes community leaders, current and future scientists, and the general public to build a stronger scientific ecosystem, society, and world.

The world is more polarized than ever. Science—especially when applied to questions about the environment, medical interventions, and new technologies—has become a splinter between people and between communities.

To overcome these divides, the Aspen Institute launched the Science & Society Program in 2019 within the Aspen Institute Health, Medicine and Society Program with seed support from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation and Johnson & Johnson.

We leverage the established assets, networks, and platforms of the Aspen Institute to convene and mobilize these groups to build bridges between them. Fundamentally, Science & Society serves as a laboratory to test ideas and approaches that help explain, connect, and maximize the benefits of science for public good. Led by a core staff of trained scientists, the program is an early responder to emerging trends, offers accessible and digestible information that combats misinformation, and is on the pulse of critical issues at the intersection of science and society.

Science & Society Happenings

Presentation Exchange with Top Students from Japan

In New York City, Executive Director Aaron Mertz offers expert feedback to students visiting from Tokyo Metropolitan Hibiya High School, one of Japan’s leading public schools. These exceptionally bright students spend the year researching global issues and come to New York to present their work to field professionals. This year’s topics include education, environmental sustainability, food systems, and artificial intelligence. This exchange is coordinated by Aspen’s International Partners Vice President and Executive Director Jonathon Price and Program Coordinator Sascha Shroff.

Ensuring Bold Science—at Aspen Ideas: Health 2025

In Aspen, Colorado, Executive Director Aaron Mertz opens a session at Aspen Ideas: Health (AIH) 2025 titled “Ensuring the Promises of Bold Science.” The panel is moderated by STAT biotech and life sciences reporter Jonathan Wosen and features former astronaut Mae Jemison, AstraZeneca Head of U.S. Oncology Mohit Manrao, and Cure CEO Seema Kumar. Both Seema (pictured with Aaron) and Mae are founding members of the Science & Society’s Program Advisory Council, which Seema currently co-chairs. Also in Aspen, Aaron spends time with Program Assistant Breana Turner (pictured), a 2025 Aspen Ideas: Health FellowPeggy Hamburg, Advisory Council member and former head of the FDA; Harvey Fineberg, head of the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation, which has supported a number of Science & Society projects over the years; and AIH panelist psychiatrist Nina Vasan (pictured), founder and director of Brainstorm: The Stanford Lab for Mental Health Innovation. At the closing session of the four-day gathering, Mae Jemison interviews two young rockstar scientistsDasia Taylor, founder of Variegate, a health tech venture focused on creating accessible tools to close diagnostic gaps in care (Dasia was featured in a 2022 Community talk of the Science & Society Program’s youth initiative Our Future Is Science), and Sirish Subash, 3M Young Scientist Challenge winner and America’s Top Young Scientist, recognitions for his invention PestiSCAND, a handheld pesticide residue detector that quickly identifies harmful residues on produce.

Blog Posts Publications

Realizing the Potential of the Science Community to Support Rising Generations in STEM

America’s rising generations—the youth and young adults best positioned to meet the country’s growing need for STEM professionals—are on the front lines of recent and rapid policy shifts within the federally-funded research and higher education ecosystems. Attracting and supporting their training and development at a time when uncertainty is high and alternative pathways abound will require significant and sustained coordination across STEM sectors. Whether situated in formal and informal learning institutions, industry, government, or civil society, we must all come together to support, reform, and enhance our collective investment in the future leaders of STEM. This report, developed as part of the Aspen Institute Science & Society Program’s 2025 roundtable series, synthesizes insights from practitioners in K–12 education, higher education, science research, professional associations, science communication, and civic science.

December 10, 2025

Blog Posts

Modernizing Academic Reward Systems for an Open and Engaged Future

How can academic institutions align their systems for hiring, review, promotion, and tenure with the values expressed in their mission and vision statements?

October 15, 2025

Featured Events

Our efforts are anchored in five core values of science
  • .Integrity:  Science offers methodical pursuits to understand the natural world
  • .Ethics:  Scientists and the public share responsibility to implement science for the benefit of humanity
  • .Hope:  Scientific innovation will make the world safer, healthier, and more connected
  • .Trust:  The rigor of data and evidence leads to confidence in discovery
  • .Engagement:  An active public and collaborative scientific workforce are vital to addressing complex community issues

Program Prospectus

A bite-sized overview of our work

Our Team


Aaron F. Mertz, Ph.D.

Executive Director

Hassan Farah, Ph.D.

Science & Community Project Manager

Sejal Goud

Program Associate

Alexandra Montgomery

Program Assistant

Laine Massick

Program Assistant

Cary Funk, Ph.D.

Senior Advisor for Public Engagement with Science

Lee McIntyre, Ph.D.

Senior Advisor for Public Trust in Science

Michelle Ruiz

Consultant on Instructional Design

Dylan Barry

Advisor on Quantum Computing & Artificial Intelligence

Science & Society Advisory Council

The Science & Society Program is guided by an Advisory Council comprised of experts and thought leaders who engage with science in society from myriad angles: academia, education, journalism, public institutions, advocacy, finance, and the arts.

Please consider making a tax-deductible, charitable donation to support our work

The Science & Society Program is grateful to the following supporters:

Current Program Support

Current Project-Specific Support

Founding Program Support

Past Program Support

Past Project-Specific Support


Stay Connected

At the Science & Society Program, we work from the perspective that science is for everyone. Whether you are a member of the scientific and medical communities, a science communicator, an interested member of the public—or anyone in between—we invite you to join us. Sign up for the Science & Society Program mailing list below to receive the latest news on our upcoming projects and invitations to our public events, delivered straight to your inbox.