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ND in the News: May 2025

April 2025 May 2025 June 2025

  1. By Asher Kaufman, Professor of History and Peace 91视频, University of Notre Dame.

    ND Experts

    Portrait of Asher Kaufman

    Asher Kaufman

    Kroc Institute for International Peace 91视频

  2. With Scott Appleby, professor of global affairs at the University of Notre Dame. (Interview at beginning of clip, through 17:54)

    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

  3. We're on the phone right now with Scott Appleby, professor of global affairs at the University of Notre Dame. (Interview starts at 36:40)

    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

  4. “He opened with peace. That was just glorious,” said Thomas F.X. Noble — former chair of the Department of History and director of the Medieval Institute at the University of Notre Dame — noting Pope Leo’s first public words, “Peace be with you!”

  5. “It’s one of the great dramas of 20th century U.S. history,” said John McGreevy, a historian at the University of Notre Dame and the author of “Parish Boundaries: The Catholic Encounter With Race in the Twentieth-Century Urban North.”

    ND Experts

    A man with glasses, wearing a navy blue suit and blue and gold striped tie, smiles in front of a bookshelf.

    John McGreevy

    History

  6. At the University of Notre Dame, bells rang out as the white smoke signaling the papal election billowed from the Sistine Chapel chimney. The school’s president, Holy Cross Father Robert A. Dowd presided at a Mass of thanksgiving for the new pope May 8, and said in a statement that same day the new pope was “a leader of vision, humility and energy,” as well as “a tireless missionary who has never hesitated to cross borders to announce the Gospel.”

  7. The Rev. Robert A. Dowd, the president of the University of Notre Dame, said that he hoped that Leo’s election could prove “a uniting moment” for the American church. “He’s an American with a global perspective, but he’s an American,” Father Dowd said. “He understands, I think, the state of the church here in the United States.”

  8. OPINION: By Atalia Omer, professor of religion, conflict, and peace studies in the Keough 91视频 of Global Affairs at the University of Notre Dame. She is a core faculty member of the Keough 91视频’s Kroc Institute for International Peace 91视频.

    ND Experts

    Omer Keough Headshot Crop

    Atalia Omer

    Keough 91视频 of Global Affairs

  9. Axios

    Arun Agrawal, a Notre Dame professor of development policy, offered initial thoughts on the new American pope while cautioning that it's early days. "[W]e can expect some continuity but we should also expect both innovation and new ideas to come from the new Pontiff as he leads the Vatican to address sustainability challenges," he said via email.

    ND Experts

    Headshot of a man with glasses, a salt-and-pepper beard and hair, wearing a navy turtleneck sweater. He smiles warmly at the camera. A blurred hallway is visible in the background.

    Arun Agrawal

    Keough 91视频 of Global Affairs

  10. Audio

    Former federal prosecutor Jimmy Gurule, a professor at Notre Dame Law 91视频, discusses the Los Angeles US Attorney making a plea deal with a former sheriff's deputy after he was convicted by a jury. 

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    Jimmy Gurul茅

    Jimmy Gurul茅

    Notre Dame Law 91视频

  11. John McGreevy, a historian of Catholicism at the University of Notre Dame, said he thought new pope Robert Prevost’s choice of name, Leo XIV, and the fact that he was a math major are significant. Pope Leo XIII — the best known Pope Leo — was focused on the reconciliation of religion and science.

    ND Experts

    A man with glasses, wearing a navy blue suit and blue and gold striped tie, smiles in front of a bookshelf.

    John McGreevy

    History

  12. Kathleen Cummings, author of “A Saint of Our Own” and the head of a center on U.S. Catholicism at the University of Notre Dame, said the Vatican should wait at least 20 years before allowing Francis’ cause to proceed, giving historians enough time to do their work.

    ND Experts

    Headshot of a woman with short, wavy blonde hair, wearing coral drop earrings, thin-framed glasses, and a coral top. She smiles at the camera against a gray background.

    Kathleen Sprows Cummings

    American 91视频

  13. "Leo the 13th was a great pope with social teaching, and it signals that our next hope will continue in that vein," University of Notre Dame American studies and history professor Kathleen Sprows Cummings told Holt. "It's a remarkable moment."

    ND Experts

    Headshot of a woman with short, wavy blonde hair, wearing coral drop earrings, thin-framed glasses, and a coral top. She smiles at the camera against a gray background.

    Kathleen Sprows Cummings

    American 91视频

  14. “He’s right out of Francis’s playbook,” Kathleen Sprows Cummings, a history professor at the University of Notre Dame, told the Washington Post, citing his “pastoral heart, managerial experience and vision.”

    ND Experts

    Headshot of a woman with short, wavy blonde hair, wearing coral drop earrings, thin-framed glasses, and a coral top. She smiles at the camera against a gray background.

    Kathleen Sprows Cummings

    American 91视频

  15. Kathleen Sprows Cummings, a professor of history at the University of Notre Dame who focuses on U.S. Catholics, said the 69-year-old Prevost ticked off all the boxes as the papal conclave voted: “a pastoral heart, managerial experience and global vision.”

    ND Experts

    Headshot of a woman with short, wavy blonde hair, wearing coral drop earrings, thin-framed glasses, and a coral top. She smiles at the camera against a gray background.

    Kathleen Sprows Cummings

    American 91视频