Thanksgiving Holiday (for students)
Wednesday, November 27, 2024 12:00 AM – 11:59 PM
- Location
- DescriptionNo classes Wednesday through Friday.Administrative offices open on Wednesday, but closed Thursday and Friday.Happy Thanksgiving!
- Websitehttps://events.nd.edu/events/2024/11/27/thanksgiving-holiday-for-students-1/
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- Nov 2812:00 AMThanksgiving Holiday (for students)No classes Wednesday through Friday.Administrative offices open on Wednesday, but closed Thursday and Friday.Happy Thanksgiving!
- Nov 2912:00 AMThanksgiving Holiday (for students)No classes Wednesday through Friday.Administrative offices open on Wednesday, but closed Thursday and Friday.Happy Thanksgiving!
- Nov 3012:00 AMThanksgiving Holiday (for students)No classes Wednesday through Friday.Administrative offices open on Wednesday, but closed Thursday and Friday.Happy Thanksgiving!
- Dec 112:00 AMThanksgiving Holiday (for students)No classes Wednesday through Friday.Administrative offices open on Wednesday, but closed Thursday and Friday.Happy Thanksgiving!
- Dec 43:30 PMWeekly Sessions — "Wellsprings: A Time for Connection and Care"The Office of Institutional Transformation, in partnership with the Initiative on Race and Resilience, invites students, faculty, and staff to gather weekly for support and fellowship. Wellsprings: A Time for Connection and Care provides a safe space for members of the campus community to discuss fears and concerns related to social divisiveness. Some sessions may feature presentations or information from campus resources. To suggest a topic, please contact Eve Kelly at ekelly11@nd.edu. Originally published at diversity.nd.edu.
- Dec 54:00 PMWork-in-Progress Seminar: "Personalism and Affective Polarization in Latin America"Kellogg Work-in-Progress seminars are designed to generate in-depth discussion of new scholarly work. For the pre-circulated paper and to attend, register here. Juan Andrés MoraesKellogg Visiting FellowProfessor of Political Science, Universidad de la República, Uruguay Affective polarization is a set of hostile attitudes towards opposing collective identities, which requires vibrant political parties. But what happens when partisan institutions are weak? In Latin America, for example, scholars have extensively documented that parties and party systems tend to have lower levels of institutionalization, brand dilution, and are often used by ambitious politicians as mere electoral vehicles. This research explores the role of personalism as a cause of affective polarization in Latin America, offering an account of such behavior in a context of electoral instability which is a key element of party competition in the region. For more information, click here.