Our Experts in the News: February 2024

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  1. Q&A with Jim Sullivan of Notre Dame’s Lab for Economic Opportunity

    A lab at the University of Notre Dame wants the conversation on how to solve poverty to hinge on research—and it’s effort is about to broaden. Jim Sullivan, Ph.D., co-founded and directs the Wilson Sheehan Lab for Economic Opportunities, a research hub with a focus on answering questions with data that ultimately leads to tangible impact.

  2. New clinic aims to boost mental health care access in South Bend

    A major revamp for mental health is underway at the University of Notre Dame, powered by a recent gift from the children of two South Bend entrepreneurs. The gift to establish the Wilma and Peter Veldman Family Psychology Clinic, named after the couple who founded online distributor Tire Rack, is designed to address a growing need for more mental health care in the community. Sarah Mustillo, dean of the College of Arts & Science at Notre Dame, says the new clinic aims to increase access to care.

  3. Notre Dame develops opioid transaction database

    “Understanding the root of the drug crisis is crucial for medical professionals, researchers and policymakers to mitigate its impact effectively,” said William Evans, the Keough-Hesburgh Professor of Economics and co-founder of the Wilson Sheehan Lab for Economic Opportunities.

  4. The Russia-Ukraine War has caused a staggering amount of cultural destruction – both seen and unseen

    By Ian Kuijt, Professor of Anthropology, University of Notre Dame, and William Donaruma, Professor of the Practice in Filmmaking, University of Notre Dame.

  5. Russia Splatters The Environment, Leaving Its Own Country A Mess

    “Russia can’t afford to take a forward-looking perspective right now,” says Susanne Wengle, professor of political science at Notre Dame, in a conversation. Fossil fuel income will one day dry up, explained Debra Javeline, the study’s lead author and a professor of political science at Notre Dame. 

  6. ABC57's Arts and Acts: 66th Annual Collegiate Jazz Festival

    ABC57's Arts and Acts, Jordan Hatfield, talks with Director of Jazz Studies at Notre Dame, Larry Dwyer, about the University of Notre Dame holding their 66th Annual Collegiate Jazz Festival. 

  7. Does Russia stand to benefit from climate change?

    The PONARS scholars, including Debra Javeline and Susanne Wengle, both associate professors of political science at the University of Notre Dame, studied the effects of climate change on Russia and Russia's role in global efforts to combat climate change or obstruct climate action.

  8. Notre Dame unifies, strengthens poverty fight with new initiative

    A new anti-poverty initiative launched at the University of Notre Dame with a $100 million gift from an alumni couple will look for new ways of thinking and talking about the issue. “Notre Dame’s Poverty Initiative is driven by a moral imperative to prioritize the needs of the poor and vulnerable, rooted in Catholic social teaching” said Notre Dame economist Jim Sullivan, co-founder and director of the Wilson Sheehan Lab for Economic Opportunities. Tracy Kijewski-Correa, director of the university’s Pulte Institute for Global Development, said the initiative is looking for new ways to manage the issue and express its impacts. “Poverty is not just material deprivation,” she said. “It affects everything and every part of a person.”

  9. Historian: Abuse in the Church is not a modern problem

    Notre Dame historian Ulrich Lehner believes it is demonstrably false that the 1968s were to blame for abuse in the church. In a book, he has analysed the abuse committed by the Jesuits in the 17th and 18th centuries – and discovered many parallels to today.

  10. America’s Becoming Less Religious. Is Politics to Blame?

    In their award-winning book Secular Surge, Notre Dame political scientist David E. Campbell and his co-authors used experiments to show that when young Americans who leaned toward the Democratic party were shown examples of politicians making Christian nationalist statements or pastors endorsing conservative political candidates, those young people were more likely to disaffiliate from religion. 

  11. Oaklawn's South Bend crisis center will be much-needed entryway to psychiatric care

    Daniel Tadmon, who will start as a sociology professor at the University of Notre Dame this fall, found in a nationwide study of mental health care providers that 70% of Americans have an easier time making a timely appointment with a psychiatrist than people near South Bend.

  12. Football in America: A record-breaking season

    “The more that sport and the people who play it permeates American culture and entertainment and other spaces, the wider swath of people are going to know about it,” said Katherine Walden, an assistant teaching professor of American Studies at the University of Notre Dame.

     

  13. White-centric Blowback: On Jason Ruiz’s “Narcomedia”

    It is hardly surprising that in the intro to Narcomedia: Latinidad, Popular Culture, and America’s War on Drugs (2023), Notre Dame American studies professor Jason Ruiz name-checks Curtis Márez’s groundbreaking Drug Wars: The Political Economy of Narcotics (2004).

  14. Two Notre Dame music professors nominated for Sunday's Grammy awards

    Two Notre Dame Department of Music faculty members will wait to hear their project names announced as winners Sunday night at the 66th Grammy Awards in Los Angeles. Daniel Schlosberg, a professor of the practice for piano, is a nominee for Best Classical Solo Vocal Album, and Stephen Lancaster, an associate professor of the practice for voice, is part of an ensemble nominated for Best Choral Performance.