90-754, Engineering Public Policy Change
12 units
Prerequisites: None
Delivery Format: On-Campus
Sample SyllabusInformation:
Description: Policy analysts, non-profit administrators and other professionals are constantly envisioning changes in public policy that they believe will improve the public good. But frequently for their ideas to become realities, public legislation is necessary. Enter politics, political process and politicians. Indeed, elected politicians are the ultimate decision-makers in changing public law. The political process can be very messy, but students can develop an understanding of how to develop and execute a multi-year strategy to engineer the legal enactment of significant public policy change. An engineer is "somebody who plans, oversees, or brings about something, especially something that is achieved with ingenuity..." The purpose of this course is to give students the ingenuity necessary to "engineer public policy change." Policy change will be examined as a process to be planned and executed. Topics will include: Readings and classroom exercises will address these topics. "Real life" cases will be used to learn how the topics must be integrated into strategy and execution. Experienced "public policy change engineers" will come to class to share their experience and knowledge. Each student will undertake a semester project in which they will apply what they are learning to a contemporary proposal for public policy change.
Last modified on November 14, 2006






