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.
ND Experts
Department of Economics
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."
ND Experts
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
ND Experts
Marketing
The Conversation
November 06, 2025
Vamsi Kanuri, Associate Professor of Marketing, University of Notre Dame
ND Experts
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."
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.”
OSV News
November 04, 2025
Robert Schmuhl, professor emeritus of American studies at the University of Notre Dame, who critically observes the modern American presidency, told OSV News that “during George W. Bush’s first term as president, Dick Cheney had influence and power unmatched in the history of the vice presidency.”
ND Experts
American 91视频
America
November 04, 2025
“From his experience in both the executive branch and Congress, he knew how Washington worked, and he also sought to remedy what he considered a weakening of the presidency in the post-Watergate years,” said Robert Schmuhl, professor emeritus of American studies at the University of Notre Dame. “Throughout eight years as vice president, he did whatever he could to strengthen executive authority.”
ND Experts
American 91视频
The Guardian
November 04, 2025
Cheney lived long enough to see confirmation of the fears he experienced after the January 6 riot. “After the riot … he saw the dangers of an overly powerful president,” said Robert Schmuhl, professor in American studies at the University of Notre Dame.
ND Experts
American 91视频
The Conversation
November 03, 2025
By Rachel Porter, Assistant Professor of Political Science at the University of Notre Dame, and Jeff Harden, Professor of Political Science at the University of Notre Dame.
ND Experts
Political Science and Applied and Computational Mathematics and Statistics
Commonweal
November 01, 2025
By Brett Beasley, an assistant teaching professor in the University of Notre Dame’s Sheedy Family Program in Economy, Enterprise, and Society.
NPR
Audio
October 31, 2025
Director Guillermo del Toro’s new movie adapts Mary Shelley’s horror classic, Frankenstein. It comes as the world is grappling with a new unpredictable creation: artificial intelligence. Includes guest Eileen Hunt, professor of political science at the University of Notre Dame and author of the 2020 book “Artificial Life After Frankenstein.”
ND Experts
Political Science
PBS
Video
October 30, 2025
Join us as we celebrate Hispanic Heritage Month by exploring the remarkable life of Juana Azurduy, a revolutionary leader who defied norms in 19th century South America. With insights from Professor Vanesa Miseres and Dr. Cheryl Jimenez-Frei, we delve into Azurduy's legacy, her battles for independence, and her enduring impact on history.
The Wall Street Journal
October 29, 2025
Marriage among the children of high earners and those who become high earners serves to consolidate wealth, and further widens the income gap, said Melissa Kearney, a family economist at the University of Notre Dame.
ND Experts
Department of Economics
Business Insider
October 29, 2025
Melissa Kearney, an economics professor at the University of Notre Dame, told NPR that "it's not that people don't like kids as much as they used to," but there are more options people can consider.
ND Experts
Department of Economics
BBC News
October 29, 2025
Mary Ellen O'Connell, an international law expert at Notre Dame University and former military educator with the defence department, said the "criminal suspects are entitled to due process. It is a greater crime to summarily execute people suspected of drug trafficking than drug trafficking is," she added.
ND Experts
Notre Dame Law 91视频