Formal Submissions - University of Notre Dame.
The Peace Studies and Anthropology doctoral program at the University of Notre Dame equips students with the theoretical and methodological tools of anthropology to answer these and related questions. The use of ethnographic and historical methods creates an in-depth understanding of the realities of situations as they occur on the ground and in local contexts, and make important contributions.
People. Meet the people at this scholarly crossroads. We have an amazing library and generous institutional support, but they—faculty fellows, Ph.D. students, visiting researchers, affiliated scholars—are our most cherished resource. Faculty Fellows. The Institute's Fellows are its core faculty. While appointed in various departments at Notre Dame, the fellows teach and carry out research.
Margaret (Peggy) Garvey is a Ph.D. candidate in the Literature program at the University of Notre Dame. Her dissertation integrates the fields of theatre performance, philosophy, and Greek tragedy and focuses on a philosophical analysis of Jacques Copeau (1879-1949). Copeau’s innovative educational methods initiated the “physical theatre” movement of the early 1900s, which transformed.
Michael Rotolo is a PhD Candidate and University Presidential Fellow in sociology at the University of Notre Dame. Prior to coming to Notre Dame, he received an M.Div. at Princeton Theological Seminary (2016) and a B.A. in Religious Studies at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (2013), where he minored in Social and Economic Justice.
Notre Dame’s Department of History offers a graduate Ph.D. program in the fields Latin American, medieval, modern European, and United States history, as well as undergraduate majors and courses spanning antiquity to the present.
Clare O’Hare, a lawyer and doctoral candidate at the University of Notre Dame Law School as well as an active member of the Keough-Naughton Institute for Irish Studies Graduate Student Working Group and a Graduate Fellow of the Nanovic Institute for European Studies, comments on restrictions on travel imposed by governments in France and Ireland to deal with the global COVID-19 pandemic.
NDIAS-Grad School Ph.D. Fellowships. Open to graduate students at the University of Notre Dame who are in the dissertation-writing phase of their program and working on a project related to Resilience, the 2021-2022 Research Theme. Applications for 2021-2022 Graduate fellowships will open in Spring 2021.