AHA Advocacy at the Federal Level

AHA Congressional Briefings

June 11, 2025

History of Tariffs

Amicus Briefs

National Park Service

September 18, 2025

Research for the Parks
The entrance sign at Pullman National Historic Park

August 19, 2025

A Company Town Preserved
A woman in a ballcap, T-shirt, and long pants sits on a stone wall. Next to her is a wooden sign for Whiskeytown Lake. In the background are trees, mountains, and a lake.

July 23, 2025

From Passion to Practice

Archives & Records

Historians & Foreign Relations

A head with gas mask, with blue wires connecting to the skull.

October 12, 2023

Improving Declassification
The Harry S. Truman Building, home of the US Department of State, in Washington, DC. The Office of the Historian is adjacent on Navy Hill.

September 20, 2021

Consistently Evolving

History Education

Five yellow chairs with metal legs around a yellow chair with metal legs in a classroom in front of a whiteboard on a blue wall.
American Lesson Plan: Teaching US History in Secondary Schools

The AHA’s 2024 report shares findings from the most comprehensive study of secondary US history education undertaken in the 21st century. The report provides empirical evidence and rigorous analysis to inform current debates over how history is taught in our schools.

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Freedom to Learn

The AHA’s Freedom to Learn initiative educates historians and others on how to advocate publicly for honest history education, responds directly to the bills themselves, and creates resources to help teachers directly affected by these bills think about how to maintain the integrity of their history courses.

AHA Statement Condemning Report of Advisory 1776 Commission

In January 2021, the AHA issued a statement condemning the report from “The President’s Advisory 1776 Commission.” “Written hastily in one month after two desultory and tendentious ‘hearings,’” the AHA writes, “without any consultation with professional historians of the United States, the report fails to engage a rich and vibrant body of scholarship that has evolved over the last seven decades."

Perspectives on Historians & Public Policy

A wide lens shot of a street in Port Elizabeth with a convoy of Ford Model T cars approaching

December 2, 2025

From Aid to Trade

Conversations about Public Policy in the AHR

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A New Welfare History

A forum on the history of welfare in the September 2024 issue.

Cover of the June 2024 issue of the American Historical Review
"The Long and Wide Environmental Justice Movement: Dispatches from Flint and Detroit"

A featured review by Andrew R Highsmith in the June 2024 issue.

AHR March 2024 Cover
"Migrating Concepts: The Transatlantic Origins of the Bracero Program, 1919–42"

An article by Julie M. Weise and Christoph Rass in the March 2024 issue.