91ÊÓÆµ

ND in the News: 2022

2021 2022 2023

  1. Jimmy Gurule, a Professor of Law at the University of Notre Dame, added that anything Trump said during his deposition "could be used against him in a criminal trial on charges related to allegations that he unlawfully inflated the value of his real estate properties in NYC."

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    Jimmy Gurulé

    Jimmy Gurulé

    Notre Dame Law 91ÊÓÆµ

  2. Audio

    Former federal prosecutor Jimmy Gurule, a professor at Notre Dame Law 91ÊÓÆµ, discusses the longest sentence given to a Capitor rioter.

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    Jimmy Gurulé

    Jimmy Gurulé

    Notre Dame Law 91ÊÓÆµ

  3. “People died alone in hospitals, or their loved ones could not even see them or hold their hands, so maybe some of these memorials have to do with a better send-off,” said Erika Doss, a University of Notre Dame professor who studies how Americans use memorials.

  4. Jason Reed, a professor at the University of Notre Dame, said food and gasoline prices are very visible and so have a large role in how consumers view the economy.

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    Jason Reed

    Jason Reed

    Mendoza College of Business

  5. “Right now it’s a completely meaningless term,” says Emily Grubert, who studies sustainable energy policy at the University of Notre Dame.

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    Emily Grubert 11

    Emily Grubert

    Keough 91ÊÓÆµ of Global Affairs, College of Engineering

  6. Samuel L. Bray, a professor at Notre Dame Law 91ÊÓÆµ who specializes in the law of legal remedies, told me over email that the court “would have a wide array of means to enforce its decision … The tools that the Court would have in its toolbox to ensure that compliance are varied. They include fines (so many dollars per day), the loss of certain legal arguments, seizure of property, imprisonment, and litigation costs and attorneys’ fees,” though Bray stressed that “courts would not use imprisonment unless they had to, and would be more likely to rely on fines and similar measures.”

  7. A recent collection on the subject, edited by Susan D. Blum, a professor of anthropology at the University of Notre Dame, features lively essays by teachers who’ve all put their particular stamp on the practice of de-emphasizing or abolishing grades.

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    Susan Blum

    Susan Blum

    Anthropology