Institute for Latino Studies

Institute for Latino Studies Notre Dame's Institute for Latino Studies advances understanding of Latina/o/x communities Until 1929 the “Minims” program, housed in St. In 1954 A.

The history of Latino students at Notre Dame goes back to 1864, when Alexandro Perea of New Mexico became the first Spanish-surnamed student to enroll at the University. By the 1870s several more Hispanics from Colorado and New Mexico had appeared on the rolls. These enrollments reflect recruitment efforts by the Congregation of the Holy Cross that intensified in the late 1800s, when Father John Z

ahm started canvassing the southwestern United States and Mexico to recruit Latino students to the University’s collegiate and pre-collegiate programs. Edward’s Hall, provided scores of young boys, including Latinos, with an elementary-level boarding school education at Notre Dame. In 1928 Latin American students founded La Raza Club. It began simply “to provide an outlet for the longing” for home, but its mission quickly evolved and its activities expanded. By 1936 La Raza was hosting political discussions on Latin America and Spain and organizing celebrations to honor Our Lady of Guadalupe. The club even succeeded in introducing soccer to Notre Dame. Originally founded for Latin Americans, La Raza started admitting U.S.-born Latinos after World War II. Samuel Adelo of Pecos, New Mexico, became the club’s first U.S. Latino president. Adelo was among the many veterans who returned to Notre Dame after the war to complete their education. There the Latinos among them found a renewed interest in the Americas and the Spanish language. Famed athletic director Moose Krause invited Adelo to travel with the football team as a Spanish tutor on long train rides, and several Holy Cross priests also took Spanish lessons from young “professor” Adelo. During the 1960s and 1970s Latinos at Notre Dame felt the influence of the Chicano student movement and grassroots community organizations that were emerging across the country. Although the University had only a handful of Chicano students and one faculty member in 1970, a Chicano Civil Rights movement started on campus. Among the students was Graciela Gil Olivarez, who, in 1970, was the first woman and the first Latina to graduate from Notre Dame Law School. Olivarez continued to blaze trails in her roles as a professor of law, director of the Office of Economic Opportunity in Arizona, chair of the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education Fund, and the director of the federal Community Services Administration. During his distinguished career at Notre Dame, (1959-1985), Dr. Julian Samora’s Latino studies lecture series brought Latino scholars to campus each semester and, under Samora’s tutelage, Notre Dame produced a host of scholars in Latino studies. Samora’s 1985 retirement led to the demise of his groundbreaking work to establish the Mexican American Graduate Studies program. Recruitment of Latinos continued, however, and these students gradually built their own network of groups and programs to acknowledge and enhance the Latino experience at Notre Dame. Their efforts as students and later as alumni helped pave the way for the establishment of the Institute for Latino Studies in 1999 under founding director Dr. Gilberto Cárdenas, a Samora student who completed his doctorate in sociology at Notre Dame. Professor José Limón succeeded Cárdenas as director from 2012-2014. In 2015, Luis Ricardo Fraga, a nationally renowned scholar in Latino politics was appointed Director with co-director Professor of Theology Tim Matovina. In 2016, Professor Matovina became the chair of the theology department and Professor Luis Fraga continued as director of ILS to present date.

ILS Professors Richman and Ruiz were happy to meet up at the LASA conference in Paris 🇫🇷 And of course, a photo at the M...
05/27/2026

ILS Professors Richman and Ruiz were happy to meet up at the LASA conference in Paris 🇫🇷

And of course, a photo at the Medici Fountain was a must📸

Congratulations to Dr. Maryam Parhizkar, who caught a flight right after our undergraduate Latino Studies ceremony to ma...
05/22/2026

Congratulations to Dr. Maryam Parhizkar, who caught a flight right after our undergraduate Latino Studies ceremony to make it to Yale for her own graduation weekend! 🎓✨

Applications are now open for the 2026 Young Scholars Symposium at the Institute for Latino Studies!After a multi-year h...
05/19/2026

Applications are now open for the 2026 Young Scholars Symposium at the Institute for Latino Studies!

After a multi-year hiatus, ILS is excited to relaunch this two-day symposium bringing together advanced graduate students and junior scholars from across the country to strengthen and showcase emerging research in Latino Studies.

This year’s theme: Latinx Representation in Art and Media

The symposium will be co-hosted by ILS Director Jason Ruiz and visiting senior scholar Professor Chon A. Noriega (UCLA), Distinguished Professor of Theatre, Film & Television.

We invite early career scholars conducting research connected to this year’s theme to apply.

Learn more here: https://theasa.net/jobs-and-calls/institute-for-latino-studies-young-scholars-symposium-2026-theme-latinx-representation-in-art-and-media/

Application Deadline 07-15-2026 Institution or OrganizationUniversity of Notre Dame Location Notre Dame, Indiana, United States Website https://latinostudies.nd.edu/graduate/young-scholars-symposium/ Salary or Compensation None Description and Requirements Annually, the University of Notre Dame’s ...

🎉 Congratulations to our DUS, Dr. Karen Richman!The University of Notre Dame has awarded her the 2026 Dockweiler Award f...
05/08/2026

🎉 Congratulations to our DUS, Dr. Karen Richman!

The University of Notre Dame has awarded her the 2026 Dockweiler Award for Excellence in Advising, recognizing her exceptional commitment to student mentorship and her leadership in building an academic program that advances the University’s mission.

As Director of Undergraduate Studies for ILS, Dr. Richman has helped grow the program to over 100 students, mentored countless scholars, advised more than 28 senior theses, and supported multiple student organizations as a faculty advisor.

A well-deserved honor — we are so proud! 💙

As we wrap up the semester, we'd like to congratulate our Postdoctoral Fellows, Dr. Jessala Grijalva and Dr. Maryam Parh...
04/28/2026

As we wrap up the semester, we'd like to congratulate our Postdoctoral Fellows, Dr. Jessala Grijalva and Dr. Maryam Parhizkar!

Dr. Jessala Grijalva will join the Charles Hamilton Houston Institute for Race & Justice at Harvard Law School this fall as a Guinier Fellow with the Guinier Project, where she will develop computational tools to inform legal standards and structural alternatives for protecting racial representation and sustaining multiracial democracy. In this role, she will work alongside leading legal scholars, quantitative social scientists, and advocates engaged in questions of democracy, voting rights, and electoral reform. While at Harvard, she will also continue her book project, Herrenvolk Democracy: Race, Exclusion, and the American Political Order, and her ongoing research on Latino political behavior and Latino conservatism.

This fall, Dr. Parhizkar will be an Assistant Professor of Latino/a Literature and Culture in the English Department at Texas A&M University, where she’ll also be affiliated with the Race and Ethnic Studies Institute as a “Mellon-RESI Fellow” under a major grant from the Mellon Foundation. She says, " I’m very excited for the opportunity to do good work in my home state of Texas!"

ILS is SO proud of you! 🎉

Letras Latinas is excited to announce that Poets and Art is back at the Raclin Murphy Museum, and we are thrilled to wel...
03/03/2026

Letras Latinas is excited to announce that Poets and Art is back at the Raclin Murphy Museum, and we are thrilled to welcome award-winning poet Adela Najarro for an evening of ekphrastic writing and live readings alongside projected artworks that inspired her poems.

📅 Wednesday, March 18, 2026
🕠 5:30 p.m.
📍 Raclin Murphy Museum of Art, University of Notre Dame

This event is part of “Poets and Art: Ekphrasis at the Raclin Murphy Museum of Art”, presented in partnership with Letras Latinas at the Institute for Latino Studies. Hope to see you there!

The Institute for Latino Studies would like to congratulate  for their win at Notre Dame’s Got Talent! Read more at the ...
02/06/2026

The Institute for Latino Studies would like to congratulate for their win at Notre Dame’s Got Talent! Read more at the link in our bio! 🎺

How do workspaces tell stories?In this Office Hours interview, Dr. Jason Ruiz shares how he built his new office from sc...
01/30/2026

How do workspaces tell stories?

In this Office Hours interview, Dr. Jason Ruiz shares how he built his new office from scratch after becoming director of the Institute for Latino Studies, and why the art and objects in the space matter to his research and teaching on race and popular culture, Latinx studies, and gender and sexuality studies.

Read the full piece, link in bio, and link below.

Bonus: Dr. Ruiz also works on the Pilsen Project, featuring murals in Chicago’s Pilsen neighborhood. Latinx Murals of Pilsen is a resource for scholarship, teaching, and discovery that explores murals and public art in Pilsen on the Lower West Side of Chicago. The project highlights how these murals are not only visually powerful, but also a “living laboratory” for themes like struggles over space and belonging, white flight and ethnic succession, faith, and gentrification, along with issues that impact the community like migration, hyper-policing, deportation, and poverty. The site includes images and in-depth context like essays, oral histories, and interviews, plus ways to explore by mural, artist, or self-guided tour, and you can follow along on Instagram at .

ARTICLE: https://al.nd.edu/news/latest-news/office-hours-jason-ruiz-on-the-art-the-lighting-and-the-items-that-make-his-bond-hall-space-his-own/
PILSEN: https://hue.crc.nd.edu/pilsen/

Photo: Jon L. Hendricks/University of Notre Dame
Story: Mary Kinney

Join the ILS and the Kellogg Institute in this session of the Democracy in Dialogue Series on Thursday, February 5. Lind...
01/23/2026

Join the ILS and the Kellogg Institute in this session of the Democracy in Dialogue Series on Thursday, February 5. Lindsey Carte and Helena Olea will examine how restrictive migration policies and border enforcement intersect with democratic erosion and inequality across the Americas. The discussion will address current migration trends and their drivers, the diffusion of migration policies throughout the region, and the consequences of these policies for migrants and their countries of origin. The conversation will be moderated by Abby Córdova, associate professor of global affairs and Kellogg faculty fellow.

Address

315 Bond Hall
Notre Dame, IN
46556

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

Telephone

+15746314440

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