U.S. Ambassador to the EU visits Notre Dame as second Nanovic Forum Diplomat in Residence
Mark Gitenstein, U.S. ambassador to the European Union (2022-25), will join the University of Notre Dame between March 22 and April 4 as the Nanovic Forum Diplomat in Residence at the Nanovic Institute for European Studies, part of Notre Dame's Keough School of Global Affairs. During this residency, he will instruct the Deep Dive into Diplomacy course taught by Clemens Sedmak, director of the institute and professor of social ethics at the Keough School. Gitenstein will also offer a public lunch lecture on Wednesday (March 26) at 12:30 p.m. in 1030 Jenkins Nanovic Halls. He will speak on "The Future of Democracy in Europe.”
Before being named ambassador to the European Union, Gitenstein served as partner and counsel for Mayer Brown LLP for more than 30 years. He also held previous government roles, including serving as U.S. ambassador to Romania (2009-12) and working with the U.S. Senate Judiciary and Intelligence committees.
He will serve as the second Nanovic Forum Diplomat in Residence, following Catherine Arnold OBE, master of St. Edmund’s College at the University of Cambridge, and former British ambassador to Mongolia. This residency allows students to interact on a much deeper level with experts in diplomacy and enriches the course content.
Sedmak said, “We were so impressed by how much our students learned from classroom and one-to-one conversations with Ambassador Arnold last year that we could not wait to welcome our next Nanovic Forum Diplomat in Residence.”
He added that “Ambassador Gitenstein’s perspective and ability to bring in additional guest speakers in the field today will give students a very comprehensive picture of the international diplomatic landscape, especially with regard to Europe. These lessons are more timely than ever for our diplomacy students and the campus community at large, who will have a chance to hear from the ambassador at his public lecture.”
This public lecture will be co-sponsored through both the Nanovic Forum and the Notre Dame Democracy Initiative’s Democracy Talks series.
All Notre Dame students, faculty and staff, as well as the general public, are invited to this event. Participants will be offered lunch before the event, beginning at 12 p.m. and while supplies last. The event will be recorded and published afterward on the Nanovic Institute’s YouTube channel, as well as archived on its website where previous Nanovic Forum addresses may also be found.
Generously established by Robert and Elizabeth Nanovic, the Nanovic Forum’s mission is to bring Europe’s leaders from many fields to Notre Dame to explore, discuss and debate the most pressing questions about Europe today.
Past Nanovic Forum visitors have included, among many others, Giorgi Margvelashvili, former president of Georgia; Kolinda Grabar-Kitarović, former president of Croatia; and Anne Applebaum, Pulitzer Prize-winning historian and Polish-American journalist.
Originally published by nanovic.nd.edu on March 24.
atContact: Tracy DeStazio, associate director of media relations, 574-631-9958 or tdestazi@nd.edu
Latest Colleges & Schools
- ‘Prebunking’ false election claims may boost trust in electionsIn recent years, democracies worldwide have seen a growing erosion of trust in election outcomes and institutions, driven in part by fears of widespread fraud. New Notre Dame research finds that “prebunking” — providing accurate information before false claims spread — boosts trust in elections more effectively than traditional fact-checking.
- Justice Amy Coney Barrett to deliver Center for Citizenship and Constitutional Government lectureAmy Coney Barrett, associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, will speak at the University of Notre Dame at 4 p.m. Sept. 12 in the Leighton Concert Hall of the DeBartolo Performing Arts Center.
- Three Notre Dame researchers win NEH grants for humanities-based projectsDavid Hernandez, the Eli J. and Helen Shaheen Associate Professor of Classics, and Morgan Munsen, senior research and partnerships program manager at the Nanovic Institute for European Studies in the Keough School of Global Affairs, have each won an NEH Collaborative Research grant. Thomas A. Stapleford, associate professor in the Program of Liberal Studies, is leading a team that has been awarded a Humanities Research Center on Artificial Intelligence grant.
- Open-access database offers insights into U.S. congressional candidatesEach election cycle, thousands of candidates vie for seats in the U.S. House of Representatives and the Senate. Until now, there has been no comprehensive, publicly available resource cataloging what those candidates say about who they are or what they stand for. A new open-access database called CampaignView, created by researchers at the University of Notre Dame, offers researchers, journalists and educators a powerful tool to understand congressional elections.
- First impressions count: How babies are talked about during ultrasounds impacts parent perceptions, caregiving relationshipPsychologist Kaylin Hill studied the impact of a parent’s first impression of their baby during an ultrasound exam. The words used by the medical professional to describe the baby (positive or negative) influence how the parents perceive their baby, relate to them after they're born and even how that child behaves as a toddler. The research has broad implications for how we train medical professionals to interact with expectant parents, as well as how we care for parents during the perinatal period when they are most susceptible to depression.
- Prioritizing prenatal care may decrease low birth weight outcomes in The Gambia, Notre Dame research findsA new study co-authored by University of Notre Dame researchers highlights the importance of prenatal care for improving the health of mothers and newborns, providing evidence that can inform policy.