ND in the News: November 2025
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Bloomberg
Audio
November 13, 2025
John Meiser, a professor at Notre Dame Law 91视频 and director of the Religious Liberty Clinic, discusses the Supreme Court oral arguments over a Rastafarian inmate's claim that prison guards violated his religious rights and should pay damages.
ABC News
November 12, 2025
The end of the government shutdown will quickly reverse most of the economic damage, since furloughed workers are expected to spend backpay and SNAP recipients will likely rush to address any household food shortage, Jeffrey Campbell, an economics professor at the University of Notre Dame and a former senior economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, told ABC News.
ND Experts
Economics
The Christian Science Monitor
November 11, 2025
The interest in specialty Bibles may indirectly indicate that religion is becoming more of a market economy, says Christian Smith, a professor at the University of Notre Dame, as different denominations “compete” for the faithful.
Newsweek
November 11, 2025
Erin Corcoran, a U.S. immigration law and policy professor at the University of Notre Dame, told The Times of London: "It’s yet another example of the way in which this current administration is trying to make it much harder to come here either temporarily or to remain here by targeting public-health issues.
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Kroc Institute for International Peace 91视频, Keough 91视频 of Global Affairs
The Washington Post
November 11, 2025
Notre Dame Law 91视频 Professor Richard W. Garnett said in a statement that even if there had been an appetite to revisit same-sex marriage, this was not the case the justices would have used. To get to the marriage issue, the justices would first have had to rule that Davis, a government employee, had a constitutional right to ignore a law she disagreed with — a position the court would be unlikely to take, legal analysts noted.
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Notre Dame Law 91视频
ABC News
November 11, 2025
"Although various commentators and activists have spent weeks claiming that a vehicle for overturning Obergefell was being considered by the justices, no informed Court observers ever thought that the Court would grant review in this case," said Notre Dame Law professor Richard W. Garnett. "The case does not actually present, in a square and clean way, the question the coverage has suggested it does. The attention focused on this minor, factbound petition tells us more about the ongoing campaign to stir up public feeling regarding the Court than it does about live constitutional questions."
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Notre Dame Law 91视频
The Times
November 10, 2025
“It’s yet another example of the way in which this current administration is trying to make it much harder to come here either temporarily or to remain here by targeting public-health issues,” said Erin Corcoran, a US immigration law and policy professor at the University of Notre Dame.
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Kroc Institute for International Peace 91视频, Keough 91视频 of Global Affairs
The New York Times
November 10, 2025
Even so, Richard W. Garnett, a law professor and the director of the Notre Dame Program on Church, State & Society, said the petition from Ms. Davis was always a long shot that attracted outsized media attention. “The case does not actually present, in a square and clean way, the question the coverage has suggested it does,” he said in a statement. The coverage, he said, “tells us more about the ongoing campaign to stir up public feeling regarding the court than it does about live constitutional questions.”
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Notre Dame Law 91视频
USA Today
November 10, 2025
But Notre Dame Law 91视频 Professor Richard Garnett said Davis’ appeal was a “minor, fact-bound petition” that didn’t clearly give the justices the opportunity to revisit their 2015 decision. "Although various commentators and activists have spent weeks claiming that a vehicle for overturning Obergefell was being considered by the justices, no informed court observers ever thought that the court would grant review in this case,” he said. “The case does not actually present, in a square and clean way, the question the coverage has suggested it does.”
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Notre Dame Law 91视频
The Guardian
November 09, 2025
Robert Schmuhl, a professor emeritus of American studies at the University of Notre Dame in Indiana, said: “Clearly in his time as vice-president, he pushed that envelope almost as far as anyone could. But the distinction is that Cheney was trying to enhance the power of the presidency for policy and security reasons, while Donald Trump seems to be pushing for greater power in the presidency that also has a personal dimension for him.”
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American 91视频
The New York Times
November 08, 2025
By Barbara Gail Montero, the Rev. John A. O’Brien Professor of Philosophy at the University of Notre Dame
NPR
Audio
November 07, 2025
Research by Brookings in 2013 argued that teens who are poor can join the middle class if they follow those steps. Now, a lawmaker in Ohio is proposing the “Success Sequence” as a requirement for high school graduation. On Cincinnati Edition, we ask supporters and opponents of the “Success Sequence.” Guests include Melissa Kearney, professor of economics, University of Notre Dame, author of The Two-Parent Privilege: How Americans Stopped Getting Married and Started Falling Behind.
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Department of Economics
The Conversation
November 06, 2025
Vamsi Kanuri, Associate Professor of Marketing, University of Notre Dame
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Mendoza College of Business
Newsweek
November 06, 2025
Christian Smith, a professor of sociology and director of the Center for the Study of Religion and Society at the University of Notre Dame, told Newsweek: "It’s a bump driven by Trump’s reelection and people’s awareness of the conservative religious part of his political base."
BBC News
November 06, 2025
Hailing his victory as as a "remarkable achievement," the imam of Cape Town's Claremont Road Mosque, Rashied Omar, said that Zohran's "formative years were shaped, in small part, in our congregation."
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Kroc Institute for International Peace 91视频
The Conversation
November 06, 2025
Jianna Jin, Assistant Professor of Marketing at Mendoza College of Business, University of Notre Dame
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Marketing
Bloomberg
November 05, 2025
When you’re in a state of physical collapse, it doesn’t make any sense to build one big building, because what you need to do is take whatever demand exists and spread it out in smaller buildings, so you can actually find a way to illustrate to people that this change has come,” says Stefanos Polyzoides, dean of Notre Dame’s architecture school, which houses the Housing and Community Regeneration Initiative. “One building accommodating a change is not urbanism. It’s architecture.”
“Most cities in the Midwest have not done anything meaningful for 100 years,” says Marianne Cusato, Notre Dame architecture professor and director of the Housing and Community Regeneration Initiative. “One of the things we’ve lost over the course of the last several generations is how to build the non-hero buildings in such a way that it becomes the hero building.”