Syracuse University

News Archive


O'Leary named to new Maxwell School chair

September 22, 2008


Jill Leonhardt
jlleonha@maxwell.syr.edu



Professor of public administration Rosemary O'Leary has been named the inaugural
occupant of the Howard and Louise Phanstiel Chair in Strategic Management and
Leadership at the Maxwell School. The Phanstiel Chair was established by a $5
million gift from Maxwell School Advisory Board Member Howard Phanstiel and his
wife, Louise; Phanstiel also sits on the Syracuse University Board of Trustees.


In funding the chair, Phanstiel says he was motivated not only by his desire to help
Maxwell, but also in large measure by what he saw as a failure of government
leadership and competence at all levels following Hurricane Katrina. "In the
aftermath," he says, "I was struck by the lack of good leadership skills and decision
making at all levels of government. And the cumulative effect of that weak leadership
has been disastrous." He points to the need for more leaders who are "ethical,
strategic and innovative thinkers-people who have a vision of achieving something
extraordinary as well as the strategy to execute it."


O'Leary has worked on public management issues for more than 20 years. She cites
the importance of "lateral thinking" for today's public managers. "Those who serve
the public are no longer solely unitary leaders of unitary organizations," she says.
"Instead, they are facilitating and operating in multi-organizational networked
arrangements to solve problems that cannot be solved, or solved easily, by single
organizations, such as in the Hurricane Katrina debacle."


"The Maxwell School is, indeed, fortunate to have Professor Rosemary O'Leary on
our faculty. She is regarded by her professional peers as one of the leading experts in
the nation on strategic management and leadership in the public sector," says
Maxwell School Dean Mitchel Wallerstein. "It is not surprising, therefore, that
following an exhaustive, two-year, national and international search, the Department
of Public Administration recommended her as the most qualified person to be
appointed as the first holder of the Howard and Louise Phanstiel Chair in Strategic
Management and Leadership. I was delighted to accept the department's
recommendation and to appoint Professor O'Leary to this prestigious new position.
She has already laid out some exciting plans for the research that she plans to
undertake in her new role, and I look forward to working with her in the coming
years as she assumes an important leadership position in the Maxwell School."


O'Leary, who also holds an appointment in the Department of Political Science,
serves as co-director of the school's Program on the Analysis and Resolution of
Conflicts and of The Collaborative Governance Initiative. In addition to her expertise
on public management, she has worked on issues relating to environmental policy,
dispute resolution and law.


She is author or editor of six books and more than 100 articles on public management
and public policy; has won 10 national research awards and eight teaching awards;
and is the only person to win three awards from the National Association of Schools
of Public Affairs and Administration-distinguished research, excellence in teaching
and best dissertation. In 2003, O'Leary was awarded SU's Chancellor's Citation for
Exceptional Academic Achievement, the highest research award at the University.


From 2003-05, O'Leary was a member of NASA's Return to Flight Task Group,
which was assembled in response to the Columbia Space Shuttle disaster. In 2004, she
also served as a member of NASA's Aerospace Safety Advisory Panel. O'Leary has
worked as a consultant to the U.S. Department of the Interior, the U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency, the U.S. Institute for Environmental Conflict
Resolution, the National Science Foundation, the National Academy of Sciences, the
Indiana Department of Environmental Management, and the International
City/County Management Association. She has twice been a senior Fulbright
Scholar.


O'Leary has worked as an attorney and as an administrator in Kansas state
government. She earned a J.D. at the University of Kansas School of Law in 1981, an
M.P.A. degree at the University of Kansas city management program in 1982, and a
Ph.D. in public administration at the Maxwell School in 1988.