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ND in the News: June 2025

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  1. "I do not expect the president's executive order on birthright citizenship will ever go into effect," said Samuel Bray, a Notre Dame Law 91视频 professor and a prominent critic of universal injunctions whose work the court's majority cited extensively in Friday's ruling.

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  2. Barrett defenders dismiss suggestions she would be influenced by negative comments from MAGA world, with Samuel Bray, a professor at Notre Dame Law 91视频, saying her ruling that limited nationwide injunctions simply shows her independent qualities as a judge. “It should reinforce the sense that she’s her own justice and she’s committed to giving legal answers to legal questions. We shouldn’t be looking for political answers to political questions,” he said.

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  3. “The Supreme Court has fundamentally reset the relationship between the federal courts and the executive branch,” Notre Dame Law 91视频 professor Samuel Bray, who has studied nationwide injunctions, said in a statement. “Since the Obama administration, almost every major presidential initiative has been frozen by federal district courts issuing ‘universal injunctions.’”

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  4. By Samuel Bray. Mr. Bray is a law professor at the University of Notre Dame.

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  5. Notre Dame law professor Samuel Bray, an expert and critic of nationwide injunctions, hailed Friday's ruling but predicted it will not allow...

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  6. A prominent critic of nationwide injunctions, Notre Dame law professor Samuel Bray, hailed the decision — but also predicted a surge of class action suits and new court orders blocking the citizenship policy.

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  7. Samuel Bray, a critic of nationwide injunctions at Notre Dame Law 91视频 whose work was cited in the ruling, said both the states and individual plaintiffs can still get broad injunctions against the birthright citizenship executive order, potentially even on a nationwide basis. "I don't expect the executive order will ever go into effect," he added.

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  8. "An injunction is an order by a court telling somebody to do something or not do something," explains Samuel Bray, a law professor at the University of Notre Dame. Usually injunctions protect the parties to the case. But a universal injunction "controls how the federal government acts toward anyone." He says universal injunctions are "a recent innovation" and their use has seen "a meteoric rise over the last 10 years" in tandem with an increase in executive orders issued by the administrations of presidents Barack Obama, Trump and Joe Biden.

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  9. Professor Samuel Bray, a nationwide injunctions expert at Notre Dame Law 91视频, told Newsweek that there would likely be litigation now on two fronts—Firstly, the states that want broader injunctions against Trump's executive order, and secondly, a "surge of new class actions" against how the executive order will be enforced.

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  10. Samuel Bray, a Notre Dame Law 91视频 professor and expert on nationwide injunctions, said the ruling "has fundamentally reset the relationship between the federal courts and the executive branch".

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  11. It’s a big day for Samuel Bray, a law professor at the University of Notre Dame. His work on this issue is cited extensively in the majority’s opinion — a notable achievement for any academic.

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  12. “Trends in extreme weather events and social vulnerability are such that there is an ongoing need to invest in the current and future resilience of communities worldwide, including the United States,” Danielle Wood, director of , the Notre Dame Global Adaptation Initiative at the University of Notre Dame, told OSV News. “Disinvesting in socio-environmental concerns, such as thoughtful interventions and the data and analysis that support them, will serve to compound environmental challenges and human suffering.”

  13. President Joe Biden gained 57 openings, both current and future, between January 1 and June 1 of his first year in office, according to Derek Muller, a University of Notre Dame law professor who tracked the early pace of vacancies for recent presidencies using the US Courts’ archived data. George W. Bush had 30 during the same time frame, while 29 opened for Obama.

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    Med

    Derek Muller

    Law 91视频

  14. Researchers at the University of Notre Dame found last year that inauthentic accounts generated by A.I. tools could readily evade detection on eight major social media platforms: LinkedIn, Mastodon, Reddit, TikTok, X and Meta’s three platforms, Facebook, Instagram and Threads.

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  15. “We were all taken aback when we saw the results,” said Marya Lieberman, the professor who led the research. More than 30 manufacturers made products that met standards. But for patients receiving poor-quality drugs, the effects could be devastating. “Once a person has been diagnosed with cancer, there’s a limited window of opportunity for treatment to work,” said Lieberman.

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    Marya Lieberman

    Marya Lieberman

    Chemistry and Biochemistry

  16. DEET “blocks the sensors for an insect to find you, so you end up with a cloak of invisibility,” says Lee Haines, a medical entomologist at the University of Notre Dame who studies how insects spread diseases. “They’re attracted to your heat, but they can’t find you.”

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    Lee Headshot

    Lee Rafuse Haines

    Biological Sciences