American Innovation and Competitiveness Act

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{{Infobox U.S. legislation | shorttitle = American Innovation and Competitiveness Act of 2017 | othershorttitles = | longtitle = | colloquialacronym = AICA | nickname = American Innovation and Competitiveness Act | enacted by = 114th | effective date = | public law url = | cite public law = Pub.L. 114–329 | cite statutes at large = | acts amended = | acts repealed = | title amended = | sections created = | sections amended = | leghisturl = https://www.congress.gov/bill/114th-congress/senate-bill/3084 | introducedin = Senate | introducedbill = S. 3084 | introducedby = Cory Gardner (R–CO) | introduceddate = June 22, 2016 | committees = Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation | passedbody1 = Senate | passeddate1 = December 10, 2016 | passedvote1 = | passedbody2 = House | passedas2 = | passeddate2 = December 16, 2016 | passedvote2 = | conferencedate = | passedbody3 = | passeddate3 = | passedvote3 = | agreedbody3 = | agreeddate3 = | agreedvote3 = | agreedbody4 = | agreeddate4 = | agreedvote4 = | passedbody4 = | passeddate4 = | passedvote4 = | signedpresident = Barack Obama | signeddate = January 6, 2017 | amendments = | SCOTUS cases = The American Innovation and Competitiveness Act (AICA) is a United States federal law enacted in 2017 by President Barack Obama that aims to invest in cybersecurity and cryptography research. The legislation was initially introduced in the Senate by Cory Gardner (R-CO) and Gary Peters (D-MI).[1] The legislation serves as a reauthorization of the 2010 America COMPETES Act that expired in 2013.[2]

The legislation updates instructions to the National Science Foundation and the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), with a director of security position being created in the latter. AICA supports the coordination of citizen science and crowdsourcing by Federal agencies to accomplish their missions.[3]

Provisions

As a result of AICA:

  • The Office of Management and Budget was given the responsibility to create an interagency working group to reduce administrative burdens on federally-funded researchers.[3]
  • Both interagency advisory panel and working groups were created to consider education for science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) fields.[3]

See also

References