The conferral of degrees will take place during the Notre Dame Commencement exercises Sunday morning, but students will receive their diplomas during the Arts and Letters Diploma Ceremony.
Is the foreigner friend or foe? This interdisciplinary conference, with a special focus on literature, religion, theology, politics, and history, and their intersections, explores the reality of xenophobia and what role it played in medieval and early modern societies. This is more than a question of the “Other”; it is about examining the ambiguities of migration and cross-cultural exchange in daily life during a period of religious, political, and cultural upheaval within Europe and beyond.
Is the foreigner friend or foe? This interdisciplinary conference, with a special focus on literature, religion, theology, politics, and history, and their intersections, explores the reality of xenophobia and what role it played in medieval and early modern societies. This is more than a question of the “Other”; it is about examining the ambiguities of migration and cross-cultural exchange in daily life during a period of religious, political, and cultural upheaval within Europe and beyond.
Is the foreigner friend or foe? This interdisciplinary conference, with a special focus on literature, religion, theology, politics, and history, and their intersections, explores the reality of xenophobia and what role it played in medieval and early modern societies. This is more than a question of the “Other”; it is about examining the ambiguities of migration and cross-cultural exchange in daily life during a period of religious, political, and cultural upheaval within Europe and beyond.
The supplemental major and minor in Latino Studies engage students with the latest research and analysis on the diverse Latino population in fields such as American studies, anthropology, history, literature, political science, sociology, and theology.…
Congratulations Class of 2020! The University looks forward to celebrating undergraduate and graduate alumni from the Class of 2020 in person over Memorial Day Weekend 2022 (May 27-30). The weekend will feature unique Notre Dame experiences to honor your many accomplishments, provide opportunities to create memories with your classmates and loved ones, and recognize your resiliency during the coronavirus pandemic.
Congratulations Class of 2020! The University looks forward to celebrating undergraduate and graduate alumni from the Class of 2020 in person over Memorial Day Weekend 2022 (May 27-30). The weekend will feature unique Notre Dame experiences to honor your many accomplishments, provide opportunities to create memories with your classmates and loved ones, and recognize your resiliency during the coronavirus pandemic.
Congratulations Class of 2020! The University looks forward to celebrating undergraduate and graduate alumni from the Class of 2020 in person over Memorial Day Weekend 2022 (May 27-30). The weekend will feature unique Notre Dame experiences to honor your many accomplishments, provide opportunities to create memories with your classmates and loved ones, and recognize your resiliency during the coronavirus pandemic.
Congratulations Class of 2020! The University looks forward to celebrating undergraduate and graduate alumni from the Class of 2020 in person over Memorial Day Weekend 2022 (May 27-30). The weekend will feature unique Notre Dame experiences to honor your many accomplishments, provide opportunities to create memories with your classmates and loved ones, and recognize your resiliency during the coronavirus pandemic.
Reunion 2022 is scheduled to return in full to Notre Dame’s campus from June 2 through June 5, 2022. This celebration will be the largest, welcoming back classes that end in 2s and 7s, the Classes of 1995, 1996, 2015, and 2016, Hispanic alumni, and all Notre Dame alumnae to mark 50 years of coeducation.…
Reunion 2022 is scheduled to return in full to Notre Dame’s campus from June 2 through June 5, 2022. This celebration will be the largest, welcoming back classes that end in 2s and 7s, the Classes of 1995, 1996, 2015, and 2016, Hispanic alumni, and all Notre Dame alumnae to mark 50 years of coeducation.…
Reunion 2022 is scheduled to return in full to Notre Dame’s campus from June 2 through June 5, 2022. This celebration will be the largest, welcoming back classes that end in 2s and 7s, the Classes of 1995, 1996, 2015, and 2016, Hispanic alumni, and all Notre Dame alumnae to mark 50 years of coeducation.…
Location: Jordan Auditorium, Mendoza College of Business
A unique panel discussion of alumni from the 1960s to the present, sponsored by the Notre Dame Initiative on Race and Resilience and the 50-year alumni from the Class of ’72.
Open to all members of the campus community, including students, faculty, staff, alumni, and all reunion attendees.
Learn how Notre Dame can become a leader in continuing the transformation to a sustainable, systemically inclusive culture that benefits and supports all student populations. Your participation will help ND become a truly inclusive community and a beacon for others.…
Reunion 2022 is scheduled to return in full to Notre Dame’s campus from June 2 through June 5, 2022. This celebration will be the largest, welcoming back classes that end in 2s and 7s, the Classes of 1995, 1996, 2015, and 2016, Hispanic alumni, and all Notre Dame alumnae to mark 50 years of coeducation.…
Join the Church Communications Ecology Program as they welcome James Poulos, Ph.D. and his presentation on, "The Cross and the Swarm: A Theological Crash Course in Digital Geopolitics."
James Poulos, Ph.D. creates and advises brands and enterprises at the intersection of technology, media, and design. He is Founder and Editorial Director of RETURN and Strategic Advisor at New Founding, and is Co-Founder and Editor of The American Mind at the Claremont Institute. James is the author of the Art of Being Free and, most recently, Human Forever: the Digital Politics of Spiritual War. His work has appeared in The Claremont Review of Books, Le Figaro, National Affairs, The New York Times, and The Washington Post, among many other publications. He holds a Ph.D. in government from Georgetown University and a B.A. in political science from Duke University, and is a fellow at the Center for the Study of Digital Life. He lives on the edge of Los Angeles.…
Latino Studies Scholars (ND) & Líderes del Mañana (ITESM) Líderes en la “Nueva Normalidad”:
Breaking Down Barriers in the US, Mexico, and Beyond
(July 11-16, 2022)
The Latino Studies Scholars Program (LSSP) at Notre Dame is a merit-based leadership scholarship designed to attract and shape key leaders working to support and empower Latino communities. In the summers of 2018 and 2019, several Latino Studies Scholars were invited to attend the annual conference for the "Líderes del Mañana" Program at Tecnológico de Monterrey in Mexico.…
Latino Studies Scholars (ND) & Líderes del Mañana (ITESM) Líderes en la “Nueva Normalidad”:
Breaking Down Barriers in the US, Mexico, and Beyond
(July 11-16, 2022)
The Latino Studies Scholars Program (LSSP) at Notre Dame is a merit-based leadership scholarship designed to attract and shape key leaders working to support and empower Latino communities. In the summers of 2018 and 2019, several Latino Studies Scholars were invited to attend the annual conference for the "Líderes del Mañana" Program at Tecnológico de Monterrey in Mexico.…
Centering Blackness, Challenging Latinidad
Latina/o Studies Association Conference 2022
Hosted by Notre Dame's Institute for Latino Studies
University of Notre Dame
Notre Dame, IN 46556
July 11, 2022 — July 14, 2022
Calls for racial justice, accountability, resistance, and representation, which have a long history in this hemisphere, have strongly reverberated across Afro-Latina/o/x communities, prompting us to confront the colonial legacy of enslavement and anti-Black racism prevalent in Latin America, the Caribbean, and the U.S. The racial justice protests that erupted across the United States after the murder of George Floyd in May 2020 re-energized the Black Lives Matter and similar movements worldwide, including in Latin America, in the fight against global anti-Blackness. The present moment links us to a long critical history of decolonial struggles, including the Black Latin American struggle, which dates back centuries. Systemic anti-Blackness can take many forms, from the disproportional impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on Latina/o/x and Black communities to police brutality; from environmental racism to the crisis of climate refugees; from discrimination to colorism; and from invisibility to colonialism, among others.…
Latino Studies Scholars (ND) & Líderes del Mañana (ITESM) Líderes en la “Nueva Normalidad”:
Breaking Down Barriers in the US, Mexico, and Beyond
(July 11-16, 2022)
The Latino Studies Scholars Program (LSSP) at Notre Dame is a merit-based leadership scholarship designed to attract and shape key leaders working to support and empower Latino communities. In the summers of 2018 and 2019, several Latino Studies Scholars were invited to attend the annual conference for the "Líderes del Mañana" Program at Tecnológico de Monterrey in Mexico.…
Centering Blackness, Challenging Latinidad
Latina/o Studies Association Conference 2022
Hosted by Notre Dame's Institute for Latino Studies
University of Notre Dame
Notre Dame, IN 46556
July 11, 2022 — July 14, 2022
Calls for racial justice, accountability, resistance, and representation, which have a long history in this hemisphere, have strongly reverberated across Afro-Latina/o/x communities, prompting us to confront the colonial legacy of enslavement and anti-Black racism prevalent in Latin America, the Caribbean, and the U.S. The racial justice protests that erupted across the United States after the murder of George Floyd in May 2020 re-energized the Black Lives Matter and similar movements worldwide, including in Latin America, in the fight against global anti-Blackness. The present moment links us to a long critical history of decolonial struggles, including the Black Latin American struggle, which dates back centuries. Systemic anti-Blackness can take many forms, from the disproportional impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on Latina/o/x and Black communities to police brutality; from environmental racism to the crisis of climate refugees; from discrimination to colorism; and from invisibility to colonialism, among others.…
Latino Studies Scholars (ND) & Líderes del Mañana (ITESM) Líderes en la “Nueva Normalidad”:
Breaking Down Barriers in the US, Mexico, and Beyond
(July 11-16, 2022)
The Latino Studies Scholars Program (LSSP) at Notre Dame is a merit-based leadership scholarship designed to attract and shape key leaders working to support and empower Latino communities. In the summers of 2018 and 2019, several Latino Studies Scholars were invited to attend the annual conference for the "Líderes del Mañana" Program at Tecnológico de Monterrey in Mexico.…
Centering Blackness, Challenging Latinidad
Latina/o Studies Association Conference 2022
Hosted by Notre Dame's Institute for Latino Studies
University of Notre Dame
Notre Dame, IN 46556
July 11, 2022 — July 14, 2022
Calls for racial justice, accountability, resistance, and representation, which have a long history in this hemisphere, have strongly reverberated across Afro-Latina/o/x communities, prompting us to confront the colonial legacy of enslavement and anti-Black racism prevalent in Latin America, the Caribbean, and the U.S. The racial justice protests that erupted across the United States after the murder of George Floyd in May 2020 re-energized the Black Lives Matter and similar movements worldwide, including in Latin America, in the fight against global anti-Blackness. The present moment links us to a long critical history of decolonial struggles, including the Black Latin American struggle, which dates back centuries. Systemic anti-Blackness can take many forms, from the disproportional impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on Latina/o/x and Black communities to police brutality; from environmental racism to the crisis of climate refugees; from discrimination to colorism; and from invisibility to colonialism, among others.…
Latino Studies Scholars (ND) & Líderes del Mañana (ITESM) Líderes en la “Nueva Normalidad”:
Breaking Down Barriers in the US, Mexico, and Beyond
(July 11-16, 2022)
The Latino Studies Scholars Program (LSSP) at Notre Dame is a merit-based leadership scholarship designed to attract and shape key leaders working to support and empower Latino communities. In the summers of 2018 and 2019, several Latino Studies Scholars were invited to attend the annual conference for the "Líderes del Mañana" Program at Tecnológico de Monterrey in Mexico.…
Centering Blackness, Challenging Latinidad
Latina/o Studies Association Conference 2022
Hosted by Notre Dame's Institute for Latino Studies
University of Notre Dame
Notre Dame, IN 46556
July 11, 2022 — July 14, 2022
Calls for racial justice, accountability, resistance, and representation, which have a long history in this hemisphere, have strongly reverberated across Afro-Latina/o/x communities, prompting us to confront the colonial legacy of enslavement and anti-Black racism prevalent in Latin America, the Caribbean, and the U.S. The racial justice protests that erupted across the United States after the murder of George Floyd in May 2020 re-energized the Black Lives Matter and similar movements worldwide, including in Latin America, in the fight against global anti-Blackness. The present moment links us to a long critical history of decolonial struggles, including the Black Latin American struggle, which dates back centuries. Systemic anti-Blackness can take many forms, from the disproportional impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on Latina/o/x and Black communities to police brutality; from environmental racism to the crisis of climate refugees; from discrimination to colorism; and from invisibility to colonialism, among others.…
Click below to review a list of this summer's professional development and networking events sponsored by REU and Fellowship programs in the College of Engineering, College of Science, Notre Dame International, Notre Dame Research, and The Graduate School. …
Latino Studies Scholars (ND) & Líderes del Mañana (ITESM) Líderes en la “Nueva Normalidad”:
Breaking Down Barriers in the US, Mexico, and Beyond
(July 11-16, 2022)
The Latino Studies Scholars Program (LSSP) at Notre Dame is a merit-based leadership scholarship designed to attract and shape key leaders working to support and empower Latino communities. In the summers of 2018 and 2019, several Latino Studies Scholars were invited to attend the annual conference for the "Líderes del Mañana" Program at Tecnológico de Monterrey in Mexico.…
ISSA's International Student Orientation provides essential information about maintaining immigration status and life at Notre Dame as well as provide an opportunity to meet fellow international students and ISSA staff. Please find more information on our Orientation web page here…
Latino Studies Scholars (ND) & Líderes del Mañana (ITESM) Líderes en la “Nueva Normalidad”:
Breaking Down Barriers in the US, Mexico, and Beyond
(July 11-16, 2022)
The Latino Studies Scholars Program (LSSP) at Notre Dame is a merit-based leadership scholarship designed to attract and shape key leaders working to support and empower Latino communities. In the summers of 2018 and 2019, several Latino Studies Scholars were invited to attend the annual conference for the "Líderes del Mañana" Program at Tecnológico de Monterrey in Mexico.…