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Policy
Studies
Core Curriculum
and Two-Year Study List, 1997-98
The core curriculum, drawn
from a variety of academic disciplines, provides the basic skills and knowledge
essential for solving public policy problems and managing policy-making
agencies and organizations. Central to this process is the ability to ask
the right questions and get a full understanding of complex and often unfamiliar
issues, to develop a complete range of possible solutions, to judge the
ability of public institutions to carry out those options, and finally
to choose and implement the most appropriate action in the most effective
and ethical way. To equip students with these skills, three analytic approaches
have been incorporated into the core curriculum: the economic logic of
public choice; political and organizational analysis; and analytic methodologies.
Economic Logic of Public
Choice
Almost every action taken
in the public sector has some economic impact, and many can have far-reaching
-- and sometimes unintended -- consequences. Policy analysts and managers
constantly confront such questions: How does one determine when the benefits
of a particular action are exceeded by the costs? What impact will raising
or lowering taxes have on the economy -- and on government's ability to
deliver services? Is it economic considerations or some kind of moral failing
that keeps people on welfare?
A two-course sequence in
economic analysis is designed to provide students with the tools needed
to address such questions. The first of these courses, on microeconomic
theory, provides a thorough introduction to resource allocation in a market
economy and how to evaluate the impact of economic regulation, the effects
of different kinds of taxes, and other fundamental issues. The second course
covers the techniques of benefit-cost analysis to give students a systematic
means of determining whether what is gained through a particular action
is worth the cost, whether the cost is measured in dollars, jobs, environmental
impact, quality of life or other standards of measure.
Political and Organizational
Analysis
In the public sphere, success
depends on managing an often bewildering variety of shifting variables,
including history, politics, public opinion, conflicting values, the structure
of a particular organization and even personal relationships. Without understanding
how institutions function, behave and interact, and without an acute understanding
of the impact these variables can have, even the most sophisticated quantitative
analysis will fail.
The core curriculum includes
a sequence of four classes designed to give students a comprehensive understanding
of how the American political system works, a sequence that makes extensive
use of case studies and offers practical suggestions for analysts and managers
seeking to navigate the often treacherous hallways of bureaucratic power.
The sequence also addresses the challenges and opportunities posed by an
increasingly diverse workforce and the rapidly expanding role of technology
in the life of organizations both public and private.
Analytic Methodologies
Numerical information increasingly
is the basis of decision making -- particularly in the public policy arena,
whether in the form of census data, polling results, economic forecasts
or budget documents. The policy analyst or manager must not only have the
data in hand, but know how to use it, interpret it or evaluate its validity
-- skills that require a firm grasp of fundamental mathematical and statistical
techniques.
The School offers a two-quarter
sequence that covers basic principles of statistics and probability and
helps students make sense of quantitative information. The two courses
on statistical methods and analysis focus on probability theory, statistical
inference and regression analysis, all of which policy makers use to help
them draw valid conclusions from whatever data they have, assess risks,
forecast future trends and evaluate existing policies.
The Master of Public
Policy Curriculum
| Fall
Year I |
Winter
Year I |
Spring
Year I |
| Microeconomic
Theory (PS 201) |
Economic
Analysis of Public Policy (PS 204) |
Political
Economy (PS 207) |
| American
Political Institutions & Processes (PS 202) |
Bureaucracy
& Public Management (PS 205) |
Policy
Formulation and Implementation (PS 206) |
| Statistics
(PS203) |
Policy
Research & Analysis (PS 208) |
Concentration
Course or Elective |
Internship
| Fall
Year II |
Winter
Year II |
Spring
Year II |
| Concentration
Course or Elective |
Concentration
Course or Elective |
Concentration
Course or Elective |
| Management
in the 21st Century (PS 209) |
Concentration
Course or Elective |
Concentration
Course or Elective |
| Applied
Policy Analysis 1 (PS 298A) |
Concentration
Course or Elective |
Applied
Policy Analysis 2 (PS 298B) |
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