Friday Jan 1, 2021
New Year's Break
Offices closed Thursday, Dec. 31 through Tuesday, Jan. 5.
Extended University Holiday for 2020-21: The…
Friday Jan 1, 2021
Offices closed Thursday, Dec. 31 through Tuesday, Jan. 5.
Extended University Holiday for 2020-21: The…
Saturday Jan 2, 2021
Offices closed Thursday, Dec. 31 through Tuesday, Jan. 5.
Extended University Holiday for 2020-21: The…
Sunday Jan 3, 2021
Offices closed Thursday, Dec. 31 through Tuesday, Jan. 5.
Extended University Holiday for 2020-21: The…
Monday Jan 4, 2021
Offices closed Thursday, Dec. 31 through Tuesday, Jan. 5.
Extended University Holiday for 2020-21: The…
Tuesday Jan 5, 2021
Offices closed Thursday, Dec. 31 through Tuesday, Jan. 5.
Extended University Holiday for 2020-21: The…
Friday Jan 8, 2021
On Wednesday, protesters breached the Capitol in an effort to halt the certification of Electoral College votes. Many of us sat glued to live-feeds from…
Friday Jan 15, 2021
Literatures of Annihilation, Exile & Resistance: An Interdisciplinary Approach to the Global Middle East and North Africa is a bi-annual symposium and lecture series that focuses on the study of literatures that have been shaped by histories of territorial and linguistic politics, colonialism, military domination and gross human rights violations. The initiative grapples with the constructed nature of history; reimagines American and global history from the position of suppressed voices; and examines how minoritized writers and scholars have historically innovated literary production and theory in the process of responding to systemic violence.
Read More about Literatures of Annihilation, Exile & Resistance: Literature As Archive
Monday Jan 18, 2021
Retired Minnesota Supreme Court Justice Alan Page, a 1967 University of Notre Dame graduate and the first African-American justice to serve on Minnesota’s highest court, will join G. Marcus Cole, the Joseph A. Matson Dean of Notre Dame Law School, for a virtual “fireside chat”, as part of the University’s commemoration of Martin Luther King Jr. Day.
Tuesday Jan 19, 2021
Please join the Kellogg Institute for International Studies in a launch event for the book The Practice of Human Development and Dignity (University of Notre Dame Press, 2020),…
Read More about The Practice of Human Development and Dignity (VIRTUAL)
Tuesday Jan 19, 2021
Please join us for a virtual panel discussion with Karin Agness Lips, Network of enlightened Women (New), and Alexandra DeSanctis '16, National Review. 12:30pm EST.
Read More about "Feminism, Women, and the Future of Conservatism"
Wednesday Jan 20, 2021
Friday Jan 22, 2021
The election of Kamala Harris to the office of Vice President of the United States represents several firsts: First woman, first Black woman, first woman of Indian descent. Panelists…
Tuesday Jan 26, 2021
Please join us for a virtual discussion with Sohrab Ahmari, New York Post, and Yuval Levin, American Enterprise Institute.
Virtual event is free and open to the public. Eastern time.
Tuesday Feb 2, 2021
Join the Department of Political Science for "A Conversation About Diversity in Political Science" with Dr. Jamila Michener (Cornell University).
Zoom Link: https://notredame.zoom.us/j/94429065725?pwd=azVwbzJybEl2Rnp5YW5mK2ZjbGp4Zz09…
Read More about A Conversation About Diversity in Political Science with Dr. Jamila Michener
Tuesday Feb 2, 2021
Sixty years ago, in January 1961, Americans witnessed the inauguration of the first Catholic elected president of the United States, John F. Kennedy.…
Read More about Panel: "A Catholic in the White House: The Biden Presidency in Historical Context"
Wednesday Feb 3, 2021
Class begin for spring semester!
Wednesday Feb 3, 2021
Please join us for a virtual discussion with: Benjamin Kleinerman (Baylor University), Jeffrey Tulis (University of Texas at Austin), and John Yoo (University of California at Berkeley)
Virtual event is free and open to the public. Eastern time.
Zoom link: notredame.zoom.us/j/95877407086
Thursday Feb 4, 2021
The Department of Africana Studies invites you to join the discussion about Racial Perspectives on the Capitol Insurrection…
Read More about Racial Perspectives on the Capitol Insurrection
Monday Feb 8, 2021
Ruth Ben-Ghiat
Professor of History and Italian Studies
New York University
From Mussolini to the present, authoritarian leaders have used propaganda and personality cults to bind people to them and present…
Read More about Propaganda and Personality Cults from Mussolini to the Present
Tuesday Feb 9, 2021
Ruth Ben-Ghiat
Professor of History and Italian Studies
New York University
What happens when strongmen leaders leave office? Most such situations end up badly. Based on research for her new book Strongmen:…
Read More about Strongmen and Their Exits: Legacies of Authoritarian Rule
Tuesday Feb 9, 2021
Keren Yarhi-Milo is the Arnold A. Saltzman Professor of War and Peace Studies in the…
Read More about VIRTUAL | The Domestic Political Cost of Deception about the Use of Force
Wednesday Feb 10, 2021
Part trivia, part discussion. Join a conversation with presenters Eric Love and Pamela Nolan Young on the importance of Black History Month.
Read More about Inclusive Excellence Workshop Series: “Why a Black History Month?”
Thursday Feb 18, 2021
With more limited in-person contact this year, the Kellogg Institute invites you to connect with our Dissertation Year Fellows and Visiting Fellows – for…
Read More about Fellows Spotlight: Meet the Kellogg Visiting and Dissertation Year Fellows
Friday Feb 19, 2021
James Kirk, Dave Campbell, & Geoff Layman
Originally published…
Read More about Religion and the 2020 Presidential Election: The Enduring Divide
Friday Feb 19, 2021
Literatures of Annihilation, Exile & Resistance: An Interdisciplinary Approach to the Global Middle East and North Africa is a bi-annual symposium and lecture series that focuses on the study of literatures that have been shaped by histories of territorial and linguistic politics, colonialism, military domination and gross human rights violations. The initiative grapples with the constructed nature of history; reimagines American and global history from the position of suppressed voices; and examines how minoritized writers and scholars have historically innovated literary production and theory in the process of responding to systemic violence.
Read More about Literatures of Annihilation, Exile & Resistance: The Language of Exile