Why Attend?
Networking and Reconnecting
- Explore historical connections with scholars outside your field
- Catch up with that best friend from your grad school cohort
- Reconnect with scholars you met in the archives
- Meet face-to face with historians you engaged online
- Build relationships for future panels, edited volumes, and more
A Hub of Scholarship
- Attend sessions covering every subfield within the discipline
- Present your work and get feedback from diverse perspectives
- Pitch your latest project to editors from dozens of top presses
- Identify new trends in the discipline from both established and emerging historians
Resources for Educators
- Participate in teaching workshops for K-12 and undergraduate instruction
- Get new insights into historiographical questions to bring to your classroom
- Find course materials from textbooks to digital primary source collections
Career Development
- Join critical discussions about issues facing historians in all professions
- Learn about the full diversity of historians’ employment
- Plan what’s next for your career at every level
- Gain new skills to improve your research, teaching, and public engagement
Insights into Local History and Culture
- Explore the unique history of the host city and region
- Join a tour with local experts to top museums and historic sites
- Discover local cuisine with new and old friends
AHA22 COVID-19 Update
The AHA has been monitoring recent news about the COVID-19 Delta variant. We remain hopeful that vaccination levels will improve, and we expect it will be safe to travel to New Orleans for the annual meeting in January. We are paying close attention to the situation in the city and state, as well as regional and national transportation issues, and will adjust our plans and policies as necessary as the situation evolves. The health and safety of our members, attendees, and exhibitors is our primary concern.
AHA Business Meeting
.jpg)
The AHA's business meeting is convened each year during the AHA's annual meeting and is open to members of the Association in good standing. At the business meeting, AHA members may consider resolutions and proposals, receive reports of officers and committees, and discuss affairs of the Association.
For more information about this year's business meeting, visit our Business Meeting page, which includes the meeting agenda and any resolutions.
Guidance for submitting business for consideration at the meeting can be found on the Business Meeting Procedures page.
What People Are Saying
Land Acknowledgement
The American Historical Association acknowledges that the land on which New Orleans sits was once called Bulbancha, a Choctaw term meaning “place of many languages.” This place belonged to the Chitimachas’ homeland and served as an important trade and transportation hub for many different Indigenous peoples, including the Acolapissas, Bayagoulas, Choctaws, Houmas, and Biloxis. We are meeting this year on the historic and contemporary lands of several nations, including, but not limited to, the Chitimacha Tribe of Louisiana, the United Houma Nation, the Tunica-Biloxi Tribe of Louisiana, the Jena Band of Choctaw Indians, the Grand Caillou/Dulac Band, and the Isle de Jean Charles Band.
Important Dates & Deadlines
Summer
Program participants receive an email with the session date, time, and location, as well as a proof of how it will appear in the printed program.
September 15
Preregistration opens. Everyone on the program must register for the meeting. Housing opens.
September 30
Deadline to submit member dues and address changes to receive the program in the mail.
October
Call for Proposals for the 2023 annual meeting published.
November
Program mailed to members. Grant application period closes. Deadline to submit proposals for late-breaking sessions.
Press
Our annual meeting press policy covers important information regarding press credentials, our policy for filming or recording sessions, premissions to record sessions, and sound and electric during the meeting.
You can also download our Press Kit here.
Code of Conduct
The AHA is committed to creating and maintaining a harassment-free environment for all participants in the Association's activities. All members and participants, including employees, contractors, vendors, volunteers and guests, are expected to engage in consensual and respectful behavior and to preserve AHA's standard of professionalism at all times. Please read the code of conduct that applies to all AHA-sponsored activities.