Francie Ostrower

faculty

Professor of Public Affairs and Fine Arts

Director of the Portfolio Program in Arts and Cultural Management and Entrepreneurship

Senior Fellow

Education Research Areas Teaching Areas
Ph.D. in Sociology, Yale University   Arts and Cultural Participation   Finance, Management and Leadership (including non-profits)
  Nonprofit Governance  
  Philanthropy  

 

Francie Ostrower is a professor in the LBJ School of Public Affairs and College of Fine Arts, Director of the Portfolio Program in Arts and Cultural Management and Entrepreneurship jointly sponsored by the College of Fine Arts and the LBJ School, and a senior fellow in the RGK Center for Philanthropy and Community Service. She is principal investigator of the Building Audiences for Sustainability Initiative: Research and Evaluation, a six-year study of audience-building activities by performing arts organizations commissioned and funded by The Wallace Foundation through a multi-million dollar grant. Prior to joining The University of Texas at Austin in 2008, she was a senior research associate at the Urban Institute and prior to that a sociology faculty member at Harvard University. Dr. Ostrower has been a visiting professor at IAE de Paris/Sorbonne Graduate Business School and is an Urban Institute affiliated scholar. She has authored numerous publications on philanthropy, nonprofit governance, and arts and cultural participation that have received awards from the Association for Research on Nonprofit and Voluntary Action (ARNOVA) and Independent Sector. Her research has been supported by grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Aspen Institute, among others. Recent professional activities include serving as a board member and president of ARNOVA and on the Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Quarterly board, and the academic advisory committee of Stanford Social Innovation Review.

 

Contact Information

Office Number:
SRH 3.326 (3rd floor)

Location:
LBJ School of Public Affairs
2315 Red River Street
Austin, Texas 78712-1536