POLITICS 222

Public Policy: Actors, Processes and Politics


Please note: this is archived course information from 2020 for POLITICS 222.

Description

This course is designed to enable development of a conceptual "tool-kit" for the explanation and evaluation of public policy.

The questions asked in this course include: Why does policy matter? Who makes policy and how? What impact does globalisation have on the types of policies domestic governments deliver? The course examines the role of policy actors such as social movements, businesses, technical experts and government agencies, including the way in which the international economy and domestic political institutions shape policy outcomes, the recognition and diagnosis of policy problems and the rationality of policy decision-making.

We also delve more deeply into a series of important challenges in the following substantive policy areas: health, the environment, employment, families and the economy.

Objectives

On successful completion of this paper students will be able to:

  1. Understand what public policies are and how they relate to broader issues of politics and power
  2. Recognise different policy instruments and the theoretical basis for each
  3. Identify how policy actors and processes have evolved, and why this matters
  4. Explain the importance of and difference between various policy issue areas
  5. Write a policy brief
  6. Critically discuss and analyse a range of policy issues
  7. Effectively communicate their arguments in written and oral form

Structure

The course material is delivered over a 12 week period. There will be a two-hour lecture each week and a one hour tutorial assigned to you in your schedule. In the latter you will review topics in further detail, receive assessment guidance.

A detailed breakdown of the weekly lectures and readings is contained in the TALIS reading list. Students are required to attend their tutorials having completed the assigned readings for the week. You should also be prepared to discuss the material with your classmates.

View the course syllabus

Availability 2020

Semester 2

Lecturer(s)

Coordinator(s) Dr Julie MacArthur

Points

POLITICS 222: 15 points

Prerequisites

30 points at Stage I in Political Studies or Politics and International Relations or Māori Studies or MĀORI 130, or 30 points in Stage I listed in Social Science for Public Health