This course will introduce you to the fundamental leadership concepts and skills you need to successfully navigate and shape dynamic policy environments.
This course will introduce you to the fundamental leadership concepts and skills you need to successfully navigate and shape dynamic policy environments.
Gas plants explode, planes crash, and nuclear power plants suffer meltdowns. Human beings make mistakes and complex technologies fail in unexpected ways.
Conflict is an evitable part of the human experience--in relationships, at the work place, in public administration and especially in the public policy making process.
This course focuses on rigorous evaluation of policies and interventions intended to support children's early learning and success in K-12. Evaluations will be discussed in the context of the current and historical landscape.
How are the inherent and intersecting relations of power including inherent structures of dominance related to the experience of violence, oppression and resistance textured into the context of politics and policy making?
Racial Foundations of Public Policy is a Fall speaker series that focuses on the historical roots and impact of race in shaping public policy as both a disciplinary field and as a course of action.
This course provides an overview of international financial economics, developing analytic tools and concepts that can be used to analyze world economic policy debates.
A continuation of PubPol 555 (Microeconomics for Public Policy), this course will deepen students' understanding of key economic concepts and principles and, importantly, apply them to the practice of policy analysis.
This course examines environmental and energy policies. We discuss the sources of environmental problems and what regulations are available to remedy these problems. We also cover energy markets, including fossil fuel extraction and electricity.