ND in the News: 2022

2021 2022 2023

  1. Hong Kong Media Tycoon Sentenced to Five Years in Prison

    Victoria Tin-bor Hui, a professor of political science at the University of Notre Dame, said that much of China’s anxieties over the protests in Hong Kong had been projected onto Mr. Lai.

    ND Experts

    Victoria Hui

    Victoria Hui

    Political Science

  2. Biden faces uphill battle in spat with Microsoft over Activision deal

    "Vertical merger challenges are really difficult to win so it will be an uphill battle for the FTC," said Roger Alford, who teaches law at the University of Notre Dame.

  3. Letters: Notre Dame’s views not reflected in op-ed

    Letter from Rev. John I. Jenkins, C.S.C, stating the op-ed, “Lies about abortion have dictated health policy” written by Tamara Kay and Susan Ostermann in the Dec. 5 Chicago Tribune, does not reflect the views and values of the University of Notre Dame in its tone, arguments or assertions.

  4. Measure your level of job burnout with this simple visual scale created by a behavioral scholar

    Employers need a faster way to check in with employees without having to roll out a full survey, says Notre Dame business professor Cindy P. Muir (Zapata), the lead author who published data validating the measure this week in the Journal of Applied Psychology

  5. Fact check: Respect for Marriage Act explicitly protects religious tax-exempt status

    "The Respect for Marriage Act does not allow the IRS to revoke the tax-exempt status of a church that will not perform or host a same-sex marriage," Lloyd Mayer, a professor of law at the University of Notre Dame with expertise in the government regulation of nonprofits, including churches, told USA TODAY in an email.

    ND Experts

    Lloyd Hitoshi Mayer

    Lloyd Mayer

    Notre Dame Law School

  6. Many voters in Republic unwilling to make concessions to unionists to facilitate Irish unity, poll shows

    ARINS is a research collaboration between the Royal Irish Academy and the University of Notre Dame in the United States, and is dedicated to analysing and researching Ireland North and South.

  7. North and South methodology: How we took the pulse of Ireland on unity

    Today sees the publication of the first instalment of North and South – a collaboration between The Irish Times and ARINS, which is a joint research project of the Royal Irish Academy and the Keough-Naughton Centre for Irish Studies at the University of Notre Dame.

  8. After Oath Keepers Verdict, Trump Allies May Be Next

    Audio

    Former federal prosecutor Jimmy Gurule, a professor at Notre Dame Law School, discusses the convictions of the leader of the Oath Keepers and a top lieutenant of seditious conspiracy and whether prosecutions of Trump allies will be next.

    ND Experts

    Jimmy Gurulé

    Jimmy Gurulé

    Notre Dame Law School

  9. Why China’s lockdown protests pose an unprecedented challenge to Beijing

    Simultaneous protests that spread nationwide are highly unusual during the Xi era, according to Kyle Jaros, associate professor of global affairs at the University of Notre Dame.

  10. The Irish Times view on the North and South project

    The project, which will run over the coming days and into January, is a joint undertaking between The Irish Times and ARINS, which is a collaboration between the Royal Irish Academy and the Keough-Naughton Centre for Irish Studies at the University of Notre Dame.

  11. What Happens When CEOs Get Sick?

    Similarly, when CEOs experience the death of a colleague on their board of directors, their firms tend to respond with more corporate social responsibility, a study by researchers at INSEAD, Singapore, University of Notre Dame, and Singapore Management University shows.

  12. China’s Covid narrative is backfiring

    “What is the image that China is presenting to the Global South at this moment? They often suggest that they have a better ‘democracy’ than the West, that they’ve got some special Chinese governance knowledge that they want to share with developing countries,” said Joshua Eisenman, associate professor of politics at the Keough School of Global Affairs at the University of Notre Dame.

  13. Sedition trial win bolsters Justice Dept. in Jan. 6 probe

    “Individuals that weren’t at the scene but were involved in the planning and plotting of this attack on the U.S. Capitol — they should be very nervous right now,” said Jimmy Gurule, a former federal prosecutor who’s now a professor at the University of Notre Dame Law School.

    ND Experts

    Jimmy Gurulé

    Jimmy Gurulé

    Notre Dame Law School