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Media, Law & Policy

Strasser Professorship Deepens Alumnus’s Philanthropic Legacy at Maxwell

Thursday, June 21, 2018, By Dana Cooke
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Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs

A new, $3-million philanthropic commitment from alumnus Joseph Strasser ’53 B.A. (History)/’58 M.P.A. will create a permanently endowed and named professorship in public administration at the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, while also building on a legacy of giving that places Strasser among the most significant Maxwell donors of all time.

Joseph A. Strasser

Joseph Strasser

The Joseph A. Strasser Endowed Professorship in Public Administration is the first named and endowed professorship specifically focused on public management at the Maxwell School. It will provide a prestigious appointment to a scholar or practitioner who is a leader in public administration, while reasserting Maxwell’s primacy in the field of state and local government management. The gift—which combines generous annual support in addition to a planned bequest—allows the school to name the first Strasser Professor in the very near future.

“Joe Strasser will forever be an important figure in the history of the Maxwell School,” notes David M. Van Slyke, dean of the Maxwell School. “Not only is he among the most generous donors of all time across all areas of our school, but his professional public service as a leader and a manager has helped define the discipline and is a quintessential Maxwell story.”

This generous gift raises Strasser’s total giving to Maxwell to more than $6 million—a remarkable figure for a lifelong public servant. Strasser’s previous gifts have funded a variety of school-wide priorities, including upgrades and renovations to Maxwell’s multi-use public events room—renamed the Dr. Paul and Natalie StrasserLegacy Room in honor of Joseph’s parents. The school’s central atrium, connecting Maxwell’s two main buildings, is named the Joseph A. Strasser Commons. A large study/meeting space for students in public administration and international relations is named the Strasser Academic Village, and he established the Strasser Endowed Scholarship Fund that supports top Maxwell graduate students.

The new Strasser Professorship recognizes Strasser’s significant professional accomplishments and his broader philanthropic commitments. Strasser’s career is viewed as a model for public administration professionals, who are challenged to manage and lead increasingly complex systems of government.

After serving as a finance officer in the U.S. Army during the Korean conflict and then earning a Maxwell M.P.A., Strasser was the first budget officer of Savannah, Georgia, where he was nominated as Young Man of the Year for saving DeKalb County a quarter of a million dollars. He later served the city of Jacksonville, Florida, as budget officer, where, among many other achievements, he introduced civilian, professionally trained fiscal administrators into fire and police departments. Strasser served in various fiscal posts in Jacksonville until he retired in 1996.

Strasser is a member of the board of Tree Hill, a 50-acre nature park in Jacksonville; he has donated funds to renovate the park’s amphitheater (which is named for him), replace its main gate, and provide for operation and maintenance. And he supports First Coast No More Homeless Pets, whose veterinary clinic is now located in the Joseph A. Strasser Animal Health and Welfare Building in Jacksonville. He is a longtime supporter and board member of the Jacksonville Humane Society and Animal Shelter.

Strasser’s early personal story is, in some respects, even more impressive than his professional and philanthropic accomplishments. In the run-up to World War II, his family lived in Austria but fled to France when persecution seemed imminent. In 1940, Strasser and his brother boarded a kindertransport rescue ship and arrived in America, where they were later joined by their father. (Their mother had died of illness in France.) Strasser has often described this escape, and the chance to build a new life in America, as the underlying incentive for his philanthropy and altruism.

Strasser, an honorary member of the Maxwell Advisory Board, is a recipient of the Maxwell School Horizon Award for philanthropy and voluntarism (2011), the first ever Maxwell Award for Public Administration (2006), and 鶹ƵUniversity’s Melvin A. Eggers Senior Alumni Award (2005). This fall, he will receive the University’s top award for alumni accomplishment, the George Arents Award.

“Joe is a true philanthropist, and it’s been my pleasure to work with him for more than 16 years to find meaningful ways for him to have a permanent impact not only on the future of the Maxwell School but also on the future of public service,” says Linda Birnbaum, assistant dean for advancement. “I look forward to seeing Joe’s latest gift begin creating the impact at Maxwell that all of his previous gifts have had. Generations of Maxwell students, faculty and staff will forever be grateful to Joe.”

鶹Ƶ the Maxwell School (@MaxwellSU)

is 鶹ƵUniversity’s home for innovative, interdisciplinary teaching and research in the social sciences, public policy, public administration and international relations. It is consistently ranked among America’s top(U.S. News & World Report), offering highly regardedalongside advanced scholarly degrees in the social sciences; and it is home also to 鶹ƵUniversity’s across the social sciences. Maxwell scholars conduct wide-ranging research through, each focused on a topical area within public affairs, such as governance, social and economic policy, conflict and collaboration, public wellness, aging, energy and environment, national security, regional studies, and more. For more information, please visit

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  • Author

Dana Cooke

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