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ND in the News: June 2022

May 2022 June 2022 July 2022

  1. In my previous column I noted the wonderful programs designed to accommodate mothers’ needs by the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops, the Ethics and Public Policy Center and Notre Dame’s de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture.

  2. Caracol Radio

    The Kroc Institute revealed that 15% of the agreement has not yet begun to be applied and that the biggest challenge for this year is the change in government. (El Instituto Kroc reveló que el 15% del acuerdo aún no ha comenzado a aplicarse y que el mayor reto para este año es el cambio gubernamental.)

  3. El Espectador

    The Center for Peace 91视频 of the University of Notre Dame indicated that the issues of land titling for peasants, territorial security and political participation of differential populations must be reviewed urgently. (El centro de estudios de paz de la Universidad de Notre Dame indicó que se deben revisar con urgencia los temas de titulación de tierras a campesinos, seguridad territorial y participación política a poblaciones diferenciales.)

  4. "At the moment, most chief executives are deer in the headlights," said James O'Rourke, a professor of management at the University of Notre Dame's Mendoza College of Business. "They see the risk of taking a position as exceeding the return."

    ND Experts

    James聽O鈥橰ourke

    James O'Rourke

    Mendoza College of Business

  5. Catherine Cavadini, Ph.D., is the assistant chair of the Department of Theology and director of the master’s in theology program at the University of Notre Dame.

  6. Mahan Mirza is executive director of the Ansari Institute for Global Engagement with Religion at Notre Dame’s Keough 91视频 of Global Affairs.

  7. With public hearings on the US Capitol assault set to begin next week, Robert Schmuhl surveys the divisions besetting his country — and explains why the outlook is alarmingly bleak.

    ND Experts

    Robert Schmuhl

    Robert Schmuhl

    American 91视频

  8. The prelates heard from lay Catholics and survivors of clerical sexual abuse, as well as from R. Scott Appleby, a professor at the University of Notre Dame, who said, in part: “The root of the problem is the lack of accountability on the part of the bishops, which allowed a severe moral failure on the part of some priests and bishops to put the legacy, reputation and good work of the Church in peril. The lack of accountability, in turn, was fostered by a closed clerical culture that infects the priesthood, isolating some priests and bishops from the faithful and from one another.”

    ND Experts

    Scott Appleby is an older gentleman with thinning hair and wire-rimmed glasses, wearing a light purple shirt and dark purple tie

    R. Scott Appleby

    Department of History, Keough 91视频 of Global Affairs

  9. "Everybody thinks that stare decisis is the idea that precedent counts for something, but it's not absolute," said University of Notre Dame law professor Sherif Girgis, a former clerk to Justice Alito. "It gets respect because it's a precedent, but there's always the possibility that it can be overturned if a bunch of other criteria are satisfied."

  10. For every piece of property that a church entity owns, there are legal, financial, architectural, and canonical concerns that must be considered, said David Murphy, program director for the Church Properties Initiative at the University of Notre Dame's Fitzgerald Institute for Real Estate, formed to help the Catholic Church think through real estate concerns.