Ideas for Tomorrow
January 1, 2015
The Tenth Decade Project will support programs to prepare Maxwell for the challenges of its second century, with citizenship (broadly understood) at its core.
As the Maxwell School’s 90th anniversary celebration in Washington last November drew toward its close, Dean James Steinberg shifted the focus of this event from the past nine decades to the decades ahead.
He described the Tenth Decade Project — a set of initiatives intended to strengthen Maxwell’s teaching and research (particularly in citizenship and public service) as the School approaches its 2024 centennial.
“Drawing on our multidisciplinary strengths in anthropology, economics, geography, history, international relations, political science, public affairs, and sociology,” Steinberg said, “we hope to explore such fundamental issues as the rights and responsibilities of citizens to each and to their communities; the implications of different concepts of citizenship in different cultures, societies and eras; how to improve the responsiveness and effectiveness of public and private institutions to citizens; and how concepts of citizenship can be harnessed to expand opportunity, promote inclusion, and respect diversity.” Innovative and forward-looking attention to citizenship, he said, has broad applicability, on topics such as aging, economic opportunity, public health, and environmental sustainability.
“This work will build on the already vigorous focus we have today on citizenship. . . .,” he said. “It will draw on our research centers and institutes which are already doing innovative work on many of these issues."
Some guests at the Washington event had already lent support to the Tenth Decade Project by sponsoring tables. This was on top of a kick-off gift by Gerry Cramer, an alumnus of Syracuse’s management school and a long-time Maxwell supporter, and his wife Daphna. Cramer previously has funded professorships in international affairs and aging studies, an SU-Israeli student exchange, and programs in SU’s Institute for National Security and Counterterrorism (support, in that last case, exceeding $2 million.) Now he has made a $500,000 gift to help launch the Tenth Decade Project. That gift, combined with funds raised at the Washington event, totals nearly $900,000 already committed.
Tenth Decade Project: Kick-Off Donors
- Airbus Group
- Alan and Betsy Cohn
- Gerry and Daphna Cramer
- Cathy Daicoff ’79
- William Eggers and Deborah McLean
- Stephen Hagerty ’91 and Lisa Altenbernd ’93
- Sheldon and Sheila Horowitch
- Adam Levine
- Lawrence Mazzotta
- Walter Montgomery ’67 and Marian Gruber
- Ron ’80 and Karen O’Hanley
- Sean ’78 and Laura O’Keefe
- John and Stephanie Palmer
- Terry ’79 and Prudence Pigott
- Arnold and Jan Punaro
- H. Lewis Rapaport ’59
- Caroline Rapking ’82 and David Hemingson
- RLM Finsbury LLC
- Donna Shalala ’70
- James Steinberg and Shere Abbott
- W. Lynn Tanner ’75 and Margaret Graw
- Richard Wilhelm ’68
“The support that you’ve provided tonight,” Steinberg said, “will go to the Tenth Decade fund to help our faculty, staff, and students undertake projects ranging from path-breaking research to new approaches to teaching to public engagement. I thank you again for your support and hope that we can all come back together in 10 years to appreciate the fruits of the work we launch tonight.”
A committee of faculty members from across Maxwell’s disciplines — chaired by Tina Nabatchi, of Public Administration and International Affairs — is working to formulate specific Tenth Decade plans. Through the fall, they developed principles for the project that reflect the School’s perspective. Throughout this year, they will work with other faculty members and the Dean’s Office to propose specific initiatives.
According to Linda Birnbaum, assistant dean for advancement, the upcoming details of the Tenth Decade Project will increase already strong donor support for its emphases.
“Those familiar with the School understand that its approach to citizenship and public service is especially applicable to the complexity of world challenges today,” she says. “People have always been eager to support citizenship education here.
“The project,” she concludes, “will present diverse opportunities for support for citizenship-centered programs at Maxwell.”
By Dana Cooke
This article appeared in the winter 2015 print edition of Maxwell Perspective; © 2015 Maxwell School of Syracuse University.
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