Skip to main content
Calendar home
Event Detail
Navigation section
My favorites
Sign In
Sign in
Message Center
Messages
Location and Persona
My Persona: Alumni & Friends
Tap to switch persona
Settings
Settings
My Menu
Add items to my menu
Navigation section
Alumni Directory
Benefits
NDBookstore
Calendar
Campus Tours
Career
Communities
Contact
Diploma & Transcript
Emergency
Faith
Football Fridays
Irish Compass
Languages & Cultures
Map
ND Athletics
ND Magazine
ND Safe
Research
Serve
Shuttle
Social
Travel
ThinkND
Update Info
Visit
Navigation section
About
ClubHub
find answers
Feedback
your voice
Accessibility HUB
Full Web
Photos
Webcams
Privacy policy
Mid-Term (Fall) Break
Tuesday, October 22, 2024 12:00 AM – 11:59 PM
Share
Email
Facebook
Twitter
LinkedIn
Location
Description
Fall break (Oct. 19-27)Review the academic year schedule.
No classes in session.
Website
https://events.nd.edu/events/2024/10/22/mid-term-fall-break-1/
More from Upcoming Events (Next 7 Days)
View all
Oct 23
12:00 AM
Mid-Term (Fall) Break
Fall break (Oct. 19-27)Review the academic year schedule. No classes in session.
Oct 24
12:00 AM
Mid-Term (Fall) Break
Fall break (Oct. 19-27)Review the academic year schedule. No classes in session.
Oct 25
12:00 AM
Mid-Term (Fall) Break
Fall break (Oct. 19-27)Review the academic year schedule. No classes in session.
Oct 26
12:00 AM
Mid-Term (Fall) Break
Fall break (Oct. 19-27)Review the academic year schedule. No classes in session.
Oct 27
12:00 AM
Mid-Term (Fall) Break
Fall break (Oct. 19-27)Review the academic year schedule. No classes in session.
Oct 29
12:30 PM
Lecture: "Are Latin American Bureaucrats Democrats? Politics, Technocratic Orientation, and Democracy"
Scott MorgensternProfessor of Political ScienceUniversity of Pittsburgh Given their role in implementing policy and executive orders, bureaucrats are uniquely positioned to respond to executive overreach. Their attitudes toward democracy, however, have avoided significant scrutiny. This talk thus explores their commitment to democracy using an original survey of nearly 12,000 Latin American bureaucrats. To explain the likelihood of their commitment to democracy, the focus is on technocratic orientation, their alignment with the president, and the level of and change in the country’s democratic context. For more information, click here. Sponsored by the Kellogg Institute for International Studies.