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The Hill
Churchgoing and belief in God stand at historic lows, despite a megachurch surge
December 21, 2022
“Somebody who has no religious affiliation, they may well value religion,” said David Campbell, a political scientist at the University of Notre Dame.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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America
Catholics need a restorative justice approach to the church’s sexual abuse crisis
December 20, 2022
Daniel Philpott is a professor of political science at the University of Notre Dame.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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The New York Times
The Miraculous Life and Afterlife of Charlene Richard
December 20, 2022
“Sainthood links the local church to the universal church,” says Kathleen Sprows Cummings, director of Notre Dame’s Cushwa Center for the Study of American Catholicism, who wrote “A Saint of Our Own,” about the more than century-old campaign for a patron saint of the United States (leading contenders include St. Elizabeth Ann Seton and St. Kateri Tekakwitha, though each was born before the country’s founding).
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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National Catholic Reporter
Eucharistic Revival seen as chance to minister with Latino Catholics
December 14, 2022
Timothy Matovina, a professor of theology at the University of Notre Dame who focuses on Latino Catholics, said that many Latinos "almost act sometimes as if the Eucharist is reserved for the most holy. You'll hear people say, 'Well, my parents were divorced, so I can't receive Communion,' which of course is not true."
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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The Atlantic
The Reinvention of the Catholic Church
December 11, 2022
As John T. McGreevy observes in Catholicism: A Global History From the French Revolution to Pope Francis, signs that the Church has lost vitality are abundant.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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Schools Are Resegregating. There’s a Push for the Supreme Court to Consider That
November 28, 2022
Mark Berends, a professor at the University of Notre Dame and the director of the Center for Research on Educational Opportunity, was not involved with any briefs in the college admissions cases before the Supreme Court.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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Our Sunday Visitor
Is politics the result of original sin?
November 15, 2022
The question was raised recently at a panel discussion called “The Creation of Politics” at the annual conference hosted by the de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture at the University of Notre Dame.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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Irish Independent
What the failed Republican wave means for the 2024 US election
November 12, 2022
Robert Schmuhl is professor emeritus at the University of Notre Dame.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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RTE Radio 1
US prepares to go to the polls for mid-term elections
November 04, 2022
Bob Schmuhl, Professor Emeritus of American Studies at Norte Dame University, on the mid-terms, and former President Donald Trump's strong hint that he will be a candidate in the 2024 Presidential election.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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U.S. News & World Report
Midterm Madness Makes for a Dramatic '22 Election
November 04, 2022
"In a typical midterm election, the question is who will control Congress for the next two years," with voters commonly slapping down the party in power and forcing a party realignment in the legislative branch, says Matthew Hall, director of Notre Dame's Rooney Center for the Study of American Democracy.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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Experts: Supreme Court shifting power to state legislatures
October 31, 2022
Jeff Harden, a political scientist at the University of Notre Dame, argues state legislatures have always held a lot of power, and the current trend in the Supreme Court isn’t giving them more.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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U.S. News & World Report
What’s Next for Brazil Following Its Presidential Runoff?
October 27, 2022
“We would see a less checked Bolsonaro – one more willing to engage in attacks on democratic institutions,” says Scott Mainwaring, political science professor at the University of Notre Dame.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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Our Sunday Visitor
Opening the Word: The view from high in the sycamore tree
October 24, 2022
Catherine Cavadini, Ph.D., is the assistant chair of the University of Notre Dame’s Department of Theology and director of its master’s program in theology.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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BBC News
China congress: How one man on a bridge marred Xi Jinping's big moment
October 22, 2022
With Shanghai and Beijing facing restrictions and endless rounds of Covid testing in recent months - the capital saw renewed measures on Thursday - "the middle and upper classes are really affected… it's been a wake-up call for the privileged, they feel that the regime is hurting them too," said Victoria Hui, a political scientist with the University of Notre Dame.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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National Catholic Reporter
John McGreevy masterfully traces church history from the French Revolution to Pope Francis
October 17, 2022
John McGreevy's new book Catholicism: A Global History from the French Revolution to Pope Francis is, as the title suggests, ambitious.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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Irish Central
If US presidents could serve three terms
October 14, 2022
In his insightful and learned look at the presidency, Robert Schmuhl, a Notre Dame professor emeritus in American studies and author of "Ireland’s Exiled Children," provides some fascinating insights into why the pattern came about and the importance of the 22nd Amendment which bars a president from running for more than two terms, put in place by a disgruntled Republican Congress who wanted badly to see the back of FDR.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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NPR
Women Over 50 Are The Most Undecided Bloc Of Voters This Election
October 10, 2022
The 19th's Mariel Padilla, Notre Dame's Christina Wolbrecht, Bellwether Research and Consulting's Christine Matthews, and AARP Executive Vice President and Chief Advocacy and Engagement Officer Nancy LeaMond join us for the conversation.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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Newsweek
How Russian Tanks Captured by Ukraine Are Helping the Fight Against Putin
October 08, 2022
Michael Desch, director of the Notre Dame International Security Center, said he did not think Ukraine's recent success in the Kharkiv region was due to any difference in tanks or other armored vehicles.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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Roblox Recent Controversy Part of Video Game History
October 06, 2022
Matthew Payne, associate professor of media studies the University of Notre Dame, said the majority of the Roblox player-community are children, a vulnerable user group; and, “any controversy where children might be harmed, would be terrible for the Roblox Corporation's bottom-line.”
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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The New York Times
11 New Books We Recommend This Week
October 06, 2022
CATHOLICISM: A Global History From the French Revolution to Pope Francis, John T. McGreevy.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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Newsweek
Why Outcry Against Netflix's 'Blonde,' 'Dahmer' May Be Missing the Point
October 05, 2022
"It's an interesting moment in media right now because viewers seem to have an insatiable appetite for true crime, and movies and series that can claim to be 'based on a true story' at the same time that some are uncomfortable about the exploitation of violence and trauma on a platform such as Netflix," Professor Jason Ruiz of the University of Notre Dame told Newsweek.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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The Washington Post
Opinion | How much cruelty is a pork chop worth?
October 04, 2022
In addition to Scully, the brief is co-written by two other prominent conservative thinkers — Notre Dame law professor O. Carter Snead, who is also director of the university’s de Nicola Center for Ethics and Culture, and journalist Mary Eberstadt, a senior research fellow at the Faith & Reason Institute.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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Marketplace
Chemical giant BASF is under threat after Russians turn off the gas
October 04, 2022
Rudi Bachmann, professor of economics at the University of Notre Dame in the United States, said it’s unfair to single out BASF for criticism.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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South Bend Tribune
Notre Dame film expert, South Bend residents weigh in on 'The Little Mermaid' controversy
September 29, 2022
"Everybody deserves to see themselves reflected in the media," said Mary Kearney, associate professor of film, television and theater at the University of Notre Dame. Kearney's research primarily focuses on gender, youth and media culture, especially girls' media.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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The Christian Science Monitor
Trust in elections: Mexico shows how fast it can be lost – and regained
September 22, 2022
Mexico’s democracy isn’t often held up as an example to follow, especially “given that it’s become one of the most violent democracies in the world,” says Guillermo Trejo, professor of comparative politics at the University of Notre Dame. “But, on the electoral dimension, there are lessons for other countries.”
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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The Christian Science Monitor
Biden’s UN balancing act: Condemning war while advocating broad agenda
September 21, 2022
With his vision of the democracy-autocracy struggle and specifically, the war in Ukraine, “Biden is speaking and acting with a high degree of moral certainty that we are on the side of the angels,” says Michael Desch, a professor of international relations at the University of Notre Dame in Indiana and founding director of the university’s International Security Center.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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Vice
Pakistan Lost $30 Billion in Floods. Should Rich Polluting Countries Pay Up?
September 16, 2022
“The global north doesn’t even fulfil its promised annual $100 billion adaptation finance goal. And much of the adaptation finance comes as loans not even grants. So it’s important to have a sense of all this resistance to understand why ‘loss and damage’ demands are not moving ahead faster,” Maira Hayat, an anthropology professor at University of Notre Dame whose research focuses on global climate change politics, told VICE World News.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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The New York Times
An Epic Struggle for the Soul of Catholicism
September 12, 2022
Now comes John T. McGreevy, a professor of history at Notre Dame and author of three books on Catholicism, with an attempt at making narrative sense of one of the most tumultuous periods in the history of the oldest institution in the Western world.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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The Washington Post
Ukrainian farms feed Europe and China. Russia wants to end that.
September 01, 2022
Susanne Wengle is the N.R. Dreux Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Notre Dame, and author of “Black Earth, White Bread: A Technopolitical History of Russian Agriculture and Food.”
Originally published at news.nd.edu.
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The Guardian
The Black mothers finding freedom in mushrooms: ‘They give us our power back’
August 28, 2022
“Drugs have been racialized in the US since the early 20th century. Cocaine was an over-the-counter medicine for 50 or 60 years – then it became racialized when Black people started using it,” said Dr. Jason Ruiz, an American studies associate professor and department chair at the University of Notre Dame.
Originally published at news.nd.edu.