Keough School to welcome 38 students from 21 countries to new Master of Global Affairs
The Keough School of Global Affairs will welcome 38 Master of Global Affairs students to the University of Notre Dame in August.
The Keough School of Global Affairs will welcome 38 Master of Global Affairs students to the University of Notre Dame in August.
Policelli will provide strategic direction for the initiative, which aims to strengthen engagement with and influence in the nation’s capital and to provide new opportunities for students, faculty and alumni to further the university’s global mission and impact.
Peace Corps volunteers selected as Coverdell Fellows will receive a full-tuition scholarship, health insurance and a living stipend each year of the two-year Master of Global Affairs program.
Offenheiser is a widely known nonprofit leader and innovator with a broad range of international development experience in Asia, Africa and Latin America.
The venture aims to enhance the skills and employability of technically qualified and professionally capable Afghan women and men in the private and public sectors.
In a program led by the University of Notre Dame Initiative for Global Development, Young Leaders of the Americas Initiative Fellows will learn from their U.S. counterparts at host organizations.
With a $1.2 million grant from the John Templeton Foundation, Ebrahim Moosa, professor of Islamic studies at the University of Notre Dame, has launched a three-year project to enrich scientific and theological literacy among recent graduates of Islamic seminaries in India.
For the Planet and the Poor, the first major conference organized by the University of Notre Dame’s new Keough School of Global Affairs, will open with a keynote panel, “A Surprising Convergence, a Moment of Opportunity,” at 6 p.m. on April 4 (Monday) in Jordan Auditorium, Mendoza College of Business.