11.002J / 17.30J Fundamentals of Public Policy, Fall 2004
Author(s)
Meyer, Steve; Laws, David
Download11-002j-fall-2004/contents/index.htm (35.22Kb)
Alternative title
Fundamentals of Public Policy
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Fundamentals of Public Policy is an introductory course that explores policy-making as both a problem-solving process and a political process. We look at policy-making from the perspective of different focal actors and institutions, including: administrative agencies, legislators, the courts, the mass public, interest groups, and the media. We examine the interplay between policy development and institutions, and review normative and empirical models of policy-making. Exploring these issues will require us to address questions like: How and why does something come to be seen as a "public problem" requiring a governmental response, while others fail to get attention? Why do we need public policies? What determines the content and nature of public policies? Who decides public policy priorities? Does public policy ever accomplish anything worthwhile?
Date issued
2004-12Other identifiers
11.002J-Fall2004
local: 11.002J
local: 17.30J
local: IMSCP-MD5-f80b354a10503f5ee3b23abd70f5aa89
Keywords
policymaking, problem-solving process, political process, administrative agencies, legislators, the courts, the mass public, interest groups, media, policy development, empirical models, legislative, judicial, executive, stakeholders, public decision making, 11.002J, 11.002, 17.30J, 17.30