Since then, the academy, particularly under Boone Isaacs, has stepped up efforts to bolster diversity.
But increasing the number of invitations and extending them to a more diverse group of people did little to change the overall makeup of the membership.
A year after the Times' analysis, the newspaper found that membership was still 93 percent white.
The new rules, which will be applied retroactively to current members, may alter what critics have described as the insidery nature of gaining membership.
Current members can still sponsor new ones, but voting rights will only last for 10 years and members can only retain them after that if they've remained active in the industry during that decade.
Members can still get locked in for life if they've had three, 10-year voting terms, or if they receive an Oscar nomination.
The Board of Governors will add three seats "to immediately increase diversity" and add non-governors to executive and board committees, the academy said in a statement.
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This year's Oscars backlash has sparked an outcry far beyond social media as some in the industry have pledged to boycott the ceremony.
Spike Lee, Michael Moore, Jada Pinkett Smith and her husband, Will Smith, have all said they won't be attending in the wake of last week's nominations, which were without a single person of color in the major acting categories for the second straight year.
Boone Isaacs - who is black and was once the only person of color on the academy's board of governors - said Sunday that "the change is not coming as fast as we would like" and that "we need to do more, and better and more quickly."
- Washington Post