Foundations of Public Policy

Quarters
Spring Open
Location
Olympia
Class Standing
Graduate
Amy Gould

Policies can be regulatory, distributive, or redistributive; material or symbolic; substantive (what government intends to do) or procedural (how something will be done and who will do it). They can provide collective goods or private goods and can be liberal or conservative. Public policies are not limited to governing public life: Our "public life" relates to how, when, and why we engage with the public sphere and this often involves our private life. Therefore, public policies can be a goal or value of one entity and not representative of an entire "public". Finally, while a policy can be driven by law or actually influence law, policy cannot do less than law requires. As noted by Schneider and Ingram, the key is for any public policy to solve problems.

 This course provides an overview of the concepts and issues at the heart of public administration: public policy. As Deborah Stone stated, “policy is the struggle over ideas and these ideas are the stuff of politics.” This course provides an introduction to the study of public policy processes and the practice of public policy analysis. By comparing and contrasting various approaches, we seek to provide guidance for future policy makers and policy analysts. To accomplish this, students will functionally critique policy designs by recognizing the social constructs and subjective limitations of policy creation, implementation, and evaluation.

Registration

Academic Details

4
15
Graduate

Schedule

Spring
2026
Open
Remote (S)

See definition of Hybrid, Remote, and In-Person instruction

Evening
Schedule Details
Olympia