Michael Crow
President, Arizona State University
Michael M. Crow became the 16th president of Arizona State University on July 1, 2002. He is guiding the transformation of ASU into one of the nation’s leading public metropolitan research universities, an institution that combines the highest levels of academic excellence, inclusiveness to a broad demographic, and maximum societal impact—a model he terms the “New American University.” Under his direction the university pursues teaching, research, and creative excellence focused on the major challenges of our time, as well as those central to the quality of life, sustainable development, and economic competitiveness of Arizona and the nation. He has committed the university to sustainability, social embeddedness, and global engagement, and championed initiatives leading to record levels of socio-economic diversity in the student body.
Under his leadership ASU has established more than twenty new transdisciplinary schools and large-scale research initiatives such as the Biodesign Institute; the Julie Ann Wrigley Global Institute of Sustainability; incorporating the School of Sustainability; the Mary Lou Fulton Teachers College; and important initiatives in the humanities and social sciences. During his tenure the university has had a fivefold growth in research expenditures, exceeded $600 million annually, completed an unprecedented infrastructure expansion, and was named the “#1 most innovative” school in the nation by U.S. News and World Report in 2016, 2017, 2018 and 2019.
Crow also committed ASU Athletics to the comprehensive and simultaneous success of more than 625 student-athletes in the classroom and in competition. ASU boasts 26 teams competing in Division I sports, 141 national championships, 367 individual national championships, and 234 Olympians. ASU has the second highest Academic Progress Rate in the Pac-12 Conference and has achieved an 87% student-athlete graduation rate.
Crow was previously the executive vice provost of Columbia University, where he was also a professor of science and technology policy in the School of International and Public Affairs. As chief strategist of Columbia’s research enterprise, he led technology and innovation transfer operations, establishing Columbia Innovation Enterprises (renamed Science and Technology Ventures), as well as advancing interdisciplinary program development. He played the lead role in the creation of and served as the founding director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University, and in 1998 founded the Consortium for Science, Policy, and Outcomes, dedicated to linking science and technology to optimal social, economic, and environmental outcomes. In 2003, CSPO was reconstituted at ASU and is now based in both Phoenix and Washington, DC.
The inaugural recipient of the ACE Award for Institutional Transformation, Crow is an elected fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) and the National Academy of Public Administration, and a member of the Council on Foreign Relations. He is the author of books and articles analyzing science and technology policy and the design of knowledge enterprises and higher education institutions and systems. Crow received his PhD in Public Administration (Science and Technology Policy) from the Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs, Syracuse University. Crow was a Division I javelin thrower at Iowa State and was a four-sport athlete in high school.
Born in 1955 in San Diego, California, Crow is the son of a U.S. Navy sailor. The father of three children—Ryan, Britt, and Alana —he and his wife, Dr. Sybil Francis, reside in Paradise Valley, Arizona.