Course Descriptions
PUBG 501 The Policy Process in Theory and Practice
This course introduces graduate students to the study of public policy and pays particular attention to the policy process: where do public policies come from? Why are policies adopted when and where they are? We will be reading and discussing some of the central works in the field of public policy as well as contemporary works illustrating various theoretical approaches to the study of policy-making. In doing so, we will get a taste of public policy research across a range of policy areas.
PUBG 502 Public Budgeting and Management
This course provides students with the political, theoretical, and practical tools to understand public budgeting and management in U.S. public policy. The budget defines and prioritizes the policy agenda, allocates scarce public resources, and distributes the burden of paying for public goods and services. The course is divided into four sections. The first section examines the role and size of the public sector, outlining the economic rationale for public sector interventions. The second section details the budgeting process, examining how fiscal federalism and fiscal decentralization impacts policy in the United States. Next, the course focuses on empirical tools for public budgeting and management, including a brief overview of budget forecasting, cost-benefit analysis, and policy and program evaluation. We conclude by reflecting on public resource mobilization and the politics of taxation. As part of the core sequence for the MPP at TCNJ, the class focuses on public budgeting structures, methodology, and practice. Students who take this class leave with an understanding of the important political role of the budget in defining and setting the policy agenda, as well as empirical tools and experience managing a budget.
PUBG 503 Microeconomics and Public Policy
This course covers the principles of microeconomics and how they can be put to use to make more informed public policy decisions. The early parts of the course will cover the fundamentals of supply and demand analysis, a tool that relies on a remarkably small set of concepts. Mastery of these concepts will provide you with a wealth of insight into understanding and predicting the effects of policies. You will investigate the concept of economic efficiency in depth including the conditions under which markets are expected to be efficient and when policy can likely improve efficiency. We will also explore and debate the role of economic efficiency as a normative goal for public policy decisions. In addition to learning concepts, you will develop concrete skills like how to conduct a basic cost-benefit analysis in a realistic policy setting and how to incorporate uncertainty into your analyses.
PUBG 510 Quantitative Methods for Policy Research I
The course introduces graduate students to foundational concepts of research design, statistical inference, and data analysis common in quantitative studies of public policies. The course takes an applied approach to methodology training: Students will conduct their own quantitative policy analysis project while learning the conceptual material. Topics include the fundamentals of research design, statistical inference, hypothesis testing, data visualization, cleaning and management, and correlation, among others. Substantial time will be devoted to linear regression and model building. PUBG 510 is a required course in the Master of Public Policy degree program but may be exempted for students.
PUBG 511 Program Evaluation and Causal Inference for Policy Analysis
Program evaluation is fundamentally about understanding causal relationships between policy interventions and society. The purpose of this class is to prepare graduate students to conduct rigorous program evaluations using a range of quantitative statistical tools designed to make valid causal inferences. Students will grow in their ability to analyze cause-and-effect relationships and better understand the role of evidence and analysis in designing, evaluating, and reforming public policies. PUBG 511 is a required course in the Master of Public Policy (MPP) degree program.
PUBG 512 Quantitative Methods for Policy Research II
Policy-relevant data come in many varieties. This course exposes graduate students to a range of statistical models used by social scientists to address the complexity of real-world data, including maximum likelihood estimation (MLE) and regression with discrete dependent variables, time series, multilevel data structures, and event history analysis. The class focuses on when to use various modeling strategies and model interpretation. Utilizing these methods, students will complete a policy analysis paper. PUBG 512 is a required course in the Master of Public Policy degree program.
PUBG 605 Health Politics and Policy
This course tracks the development and inner workings of the American health care system. It starts by charting how the national and state governments designed the health care market. It then shows how citizens, public officials, and players in the health care industry continue to shape the policy sector to explain the glaring contradictions of American health care. For example, the United States is a global leader in medical innovation, but it lags behind peer countries in controlling the cost of medical care and making it available to citizens.
PUBG 610 Environmental Policy
Society’s ability to address environmental issues depends on the policy choices chosen by different governing institutions. What environmental issues demand government attention, how do governments and bureaucracies approach them, and with what degree of success? The course offers models of the policy process and tools of environmental policymaking as practiced in the United States and other countries. Later sections apply these concepts in different assignments and environmental issues. With a focus on environmental issues, the course offers analytical tools and case studies to understand the making of public policy.
PUBG 699 Public Policy Internship
This course is designed to help students integrate theory and ethics into their practical work experience in public policy. In addition to their experience at their internship placement, students will work with their colleagues and their faculty advisor to gain an appreciation of the approaches for responsive decision-making and ethical leadership in public governance. The course breaks into three key segments. The first session focuses on broad themes, discussing ethics, bias, leadership, and persuasion. The second (third, and fourth) session applies these themes to complex current issues with guest speakers. In the final session, students are invited to reflect on challenges they have encountered in their work experience over the course of the semester in the internship portfolio project. PUBG 699 is a key component of the Master of Public Policy program and is designed for graduate students or undergraduate students in the combined Five-year Combined BA/MPP.
Additional course descriptions are forthcoming.