SCU in the News is a compilation of media placements secured by UMC Media Relations, as well as other highlights featuring faculty, staff, or students.
Announcement of Julie H. Sullivan as 30th President of Santa Clara University
The Mercury News Santa Clara University’s new president looks nothing like her predecessors. The Catholic school announced Tuesday that, for the first time ever, a woman and lay person will lead the 171-year-old institution after generations with Jesuit priests at the helm. Also in East Bay Times.
Silicon Valley Business Journal This isn't the first time that Julie H. Sullivan has found herself as the first layperson and first woman to preside over what had always been a male-led institution.
San Francisco Chronicle The appointment of Sullivan, both the first woman and first layperson to hold the permanent position, was announced in a public ceremony in front of the historic Mission Church.
Stories also appeared in San Jose Inside, National Catholic Reporter, The Silicon Valley Voice, and 12 additional online news outlets. KTVU (FOX), ABC7, KPIX5 (CBS), and KNTV (NBC), each covered the story multiple times on their television broadcasts, as did radio broadcasts from KQED and KCBS.
Op-eds or Thought Leadership
Opinion articles written by Santa Clara University faculty or staff, or other articles prominently featuring Santa Clara thought leadership.
ABC7
Vitaliy Osmolovskyy (JST). Father Vitaly Osmolovskyy is working on his doctoral degree at Santa Clara University, but now he is in Poland organizing aid for Ukraine, his homeland.
KPIX5
Joe Mueller (JST). At a gathering for prayer at Santa Clara University's Jesuit School of Theology, Dean Joe Mueller called on anyone who can to pray for peace.
Middle East Eye Farid Senzai (Political Science). The United States needs a bold and ambitious Marshall Plan for Afghanistan.
KQET (PBS)
Margaret Russell (Law). Professor Russell and Marcia Coyle discuss the nomination of Ketanji Brown Jackson as Supreme Court justice.
KRON - SF
Bradley Joondeph (Law). President Joe Biden has chosen Ketanji Brown Jackson as his Supreme Court nominee, and if approved, his choice would make her the first Black woman selected to serve on the high court.
KQED
Ann Skeet (Markkula Center). Governor Gavin Newsom announced proposed subsidies or rebates to mitigate rising fuel costs for Californians.
KFSN ABC
Eric Goldman (Law). Consumers and businesses rely on them, but some businesses try to massage the message you get about them, so the reviews you actually see don't include all the reviews people left.
America Magazine
Brian Patrick Green (Markkula Center). In a time when smartphones are rarely more than a hand-reach away, more people are considering a 40-day break from social media as a deeper Lenten sacrifice.
The Atlantic
Danielle Morgan (English). In these recent works, Black innovations and labor receive the prominence they deserve in popular narratives.
The Wall Street Journal
Kirthi Kalyanam (Marketing). Inflation is everywhere. You’ve probably seen higher costs for beef, electricity and rent. Now it’s coming for your digital subscriptions too.
Times Higher Education
Molly M King (Sociology). Women with disabilities in academia face “double the trouble of being a woman and disabled.”
Psychology Today
Birgit Koopmann-Holm (Psychology). If a group of alien tourists on a spectacular intergalactic cruise were to make a brief pit-stop on the third planet from the sun this afternoon, they would likely be left a little baffled.
College of Arts & Sciences
OI Canadian
Amy Randall (History). Ukraine is not controlled by Nazis or fascists despite the growth of ultranationalist and fascist groups in recent years, a global problem that is not exclusive to Ukraine.
Washington Times
Thomas Plante (Psychology). The American Psychological Association has revised its standards for high school psychology curricula for the first time in 11 years, citing a need to make classroom lessons more scientific and focused on diversity.
Anna Sampaio (Ethnic Studies). At least a thousand men have been governor of a U.S. state; just 45 women have, and only two of them Latinas. This year, their presence on primary ballots is making a difference.
The Rumpus
Miah Jeffra (English). In Sean Thor Conroe’s novel, Fuccboi, we amble along with an intelligent and hapless character—a writer also by the name of Sean—through the streets of Philly.
School of Law
Protocol
Stephen Diamond. The administration’s executive order on crypto was celebrated by some as validation that the currency is legit. Others aren’t so sure it’s the “welcome mat” people want it to be.
MediaPost
Eric Goldman. A bill that would effectively require online marketplaces to vet their platforms for fakes is drawing new opposition from tech companies, digital rights groups and law professors.
Brookings Institution
Eric Goldman. In July 2021, President Biden lost his patience with Facebook. “They’re killing people,” the president said of the falsehoods around the coronavirus and COVID-19 vaccines circulating on the platform.
Leavey School of Business
Mercury News Jo-Ellen Pozner (Management). A grand Silicon Valley experiment in how and where work will be done in a post-pandemic world has just gotten underway.
Patch Audrey Guo (Economics). California has almost $20 billion of debt from the surge in unemployment claims during the pandemic, more than any other state. Also found on the North Coast Journal and 5 other sources.
Markkula Center for Applied Ethics
Patch
John Pelissero. As embattled Mesa County Clerk and Recorder Tina Peters campaigns for the Republican nomination for Colorado secretary of state, a trail of investigations, ethics complaints and lawsuits follow her. Also found on Colorado Newsline and 10 other sources.
MarketWatch Ann Skeet. How Big Tech is supporting Ukraine, from halting sales and ads in Russia to fighting misinformation.
America Magazine
Brian Patrick Green. The tale spun by Meta, the company formerly known as Facebook, in a Super Bowl ad to 112 million viewers, felt like a familiar tale of temptation.
Proactive Investors Australia
Irina Raicu. Financial crimes watchdog Austrac could derail Blackstone’s $8.9 billion takeover of Crown Resports Ltd after it accused the entertainment giant of more than 500 breaches of anti-money laundering and counter-terrorism financing laws.
KPIX5 Irina Raicu. Russia’s attack on Ukraine has Bay Area tech giants responding to increasing international pressure to take action against Russian disinformation and social media campaigns.
Religion News Service
David DeCosse. The response of Catholic moral theologians to the Russian invasion of Ukraine has been universally negative.
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