ND in the News: October 2025
September 2025 October 2025 November 2025
U.S. News & World Report
October 14, 2025
So, in theory, the customer should have been happy. Instead, what really made the difference for the bank was identifying the perpetrator. “We never thought in our wildest dreams that we'd actually find this in our study," says Vamsi Kanuri, associate professor of marketing at Notre Dame's Mendoza College of Business and one of the researchers who conducted the study. "Banks were very surprised."
ND Experts
Mendoza College of Business
OSV News
October 13, 2025
James Sullivan, a professor of economics at the University of Notre Dame and co-founder and director of its Lab for Economic Opportunities, a center researching effective solutions to reduce poverty in America, agreed the exhortation emphasizes the indispensable role of care for the poor in the life of the faithful.
ND Experts
Economics; Wilson Sheehan Lab for Economic Opportunities (LEO)
The Christian Science Monitor
October 08, 2025
The primary legal question at play in Chiles v. Salazar is a “doctrinal question of free speech law,” says Rick Garnett, who heads the Program on Church, State, and Society at University of Notre Dame’s law school in Indiana. “Namely, ‘What’s the distinction between regulations of conduct and regulations of expression?’” The court, he says, has a deep well of case law to draw upon in making its ruling.
ND Experts
Notre Dame Law 91视频
Forbes
October 07, 2025
The University of Notre Dame has received two recent gifts totaling $205 milliion. The first is a $150 million donation from alumnus Matthew Walsh and his wife, Joyce, for Notre Dames’s 91视频 of Architecture. The second is a $55 million donation from Francis and Kathleen Rooney to endow an institute for the preservation of American democracy.
Newsweek
October 06, 2025
"Giving a security guarantee to Qatar, or to anyone else, increases the risk of the United States being pulled into a future conflict, because it expands the list of things that the United States promises to fight for," Eugene Gholz, a former senior Pentagon adviser now serving as associate professor at the University of Notre Dame, told Newsweek.
ND Experts
Political Science
USA Today
October 06, 2025
University of Notre Dame Law 91视频 professor Mary Ellen O'Connell, an expert on international law, described a Sept. 15 strike by the U.S. military on an alleged drug boat near Venezuela as "unlawful killing." "It only sends the message that compliance with law doesn’t matter to the U.S.," O'Connell said.
ND Experts
Notre Dame Law 91视频
CNN
October 06, 2025
“The idea that Mormons were a persecuted group in the 1800s is deeply ingrained in the Mormon psyche,” said David Campbell, a University of Notre Dame professor and author of “Seeking the Promised Land: Mormons and American Politics.”
ND Experts
Political Science
USA Today
October 04, 2025
"The U.S. has had a democratic tradition when it comes to military service where, though you pay a price for dissent, when that occurs, it’s a warning to the political leadership that even the troops who are ordered to do these things will speak out," said David Cortright, a professor at the Notre Dame Kroc Institute for International Peace 91视频.
ND Experts
Keough 91视频 of Global Affairs