Summer in Aspen 2021

Summer 2021 is like no other, with a variety of in-person and digital opportunities to convene and connect around the ideas that shape ourselves, our society, and the world in which we live.

From events at the Aspen Meadows campus to online programming that is free to all, this summer the Aspen Institute brings together a diverse mix of thinkers from across the country to reflect, share ideas, and get inspired.

Upcoming Events Near You

Events Across the Institute

The Aspen Executive Seminar on Leadership, Values, and the Good Society – October 2026

The Aspen Institute’s signature seminar on Leadership, Values, and the Good Society.

Oct 17 – 23, 2026, 4:00pm – 2:00pm MDT

2026 Socrates Summer Seminars

The Socrates Program is excited to host our annual Summer Seminars this July 17th-20th! The seminar tuition is $2,500. Limited scholarships are available by application.

Jul 17 – 20, 2026, 5:00pm – 12:00pm MDT
Summer Seminars

2026 Aspen Security Forum

Jul 14 – 17, 2026, 5:00pm – 1:00pm MDT

Aspen Words Book Ball

Thu Jul 9, 2026, 5:45pm – 9:30pm MDT

2026 Aspen Ideas Festival

Jun 25 – Jul 1, 2026, 3:00pm MDT

Aspen Ideas: Health 2026

Jun 22 – 25, 2026, 3:00pm – 12:00pm MDT

Employee Ownership Ideas Forum 2026

The 2026 Employee Ownership Ideas Forum will bring together leading policymakers, practitioners, experts, and the media for a robust discussion on how we can grow employee ownership for the shared benefit of American workers and businesses. 

Jun 2 – 3, 2026, 9:00am – 5:00pm EDT
long color picture with US Capitol building and a tree in the foreground plus Aspen & Rutgers logos

2026 Science and Technology Policy Fellowship

A paid, full-time summer 2026 fellowship for science and technology leaders.

Jun 1 – 26, 2026, 9:00am – 5:00pm PDT

The Aspen Executive Seminar on Leadership, Values, and the Good Society – June 2026

The Aspen Institute’s signature seminar on Leadership, Values, and the Good Society.

May 30 – Jun 5, 2026, 4:00pm – 2:00pm MDT

Socrates Japan, Kanagawa 2026

Innovation has been the source of increased wealth, new technologies, and growth at a rapid pace over the past two centuries. Our society either lauds the individuals who drive change as innovators, entrepreneurs, and leaders or denigrates them as mavericks out of touch with reality. Often the technologies they invent rely on creative destruction to drive their successes, but this raises the question of when its acceptable or not. Join us for an exploration of case studies of innovators, innovation, and regulation. When does creative destruction cross the line into complete destruction? Can regulation keep guardrails on the creative process or is it always a step behind?

May 22 – 24, 2026, 8:00pm JST