Carnahan Hall
Russell Renka
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PS418/618 Course Syllabus -
Professor Russell Renka - Fall 2003
| PS418/618 - Public Policy Analysis | Professor Russell D. Renka |
| Fall 2003 | Campus Office: Carnahan 211-L |
| Tuesday, 6:00-8:50 p.m. | Office Hours: MTWR 9:00-10:00 a.m. or by appointment |
| Classroom: Carnahan Hall, Room 210 | Office Telephone: (573) 651-2692 |
| Home Website: http://cstl-cla.semo.edu/renka/ | Office FAX: (573) 651-2695 |
| email: rdrenka@semo.edu | Departmental Telephone: (573) 651-2183 |
° Introduction
° Course Books and Readings
° PS418/618 Course Requirements
° Expectations of Students
° Journal Resources
° Reaching me
°Weekly Topics and Readings
"Everything should be made as simple as possible, but not simpler."
Albert Einstein
One of the most challenging enterprises in social science is the analysis of public policy. Policy analysts are professional skeptics. Public policy is produced largely by governments through those in key positions of power there. The late Aaron Wildavsky cited policy analysis as "speaking truth to power," meaning those in power heard whether their policy works well or poorly regardless of what they wanted to hear. That's an ideal, because policy analysis is typically done by analysts for those in power. They are agents of a client who defines the policy problem and establishes the limits of analysis. Within that constraint, the analyst's job is to produce a realistic answer to the question "if we do this, what will the results be?" or, more often, "since we've done this, what has the result been?"
Sp analysts do forecasting alongside post mortems of how policy will work. Forecasting violates the traditional political science model of the policy process, which assigns analysis to the end stage of a process where a public problem is defined, policy alternatives are formulated, stakeholders thrash out which if any is adopted, politicians decide upon adopting one or more, the adopted policy is implemented or carried out, and then at the end the policy is monitored and evaluated by analysts. Examples include the outcomes measures enjoying a current popularity among educational administrators and politicians charged with overseeing them. Policy analysis determines if something worked efficiently and well, and in a fashion consistent with the goals of its creators. It is post hoc. But in real life, policy analysis is done at all stages of the policy process. It can do forecasts, post mortems, or both. Ideally the analyst says "here's what will happen if you do this" and then once carried out, that prediction is tested post hoc against the real world's results. Policy analysis is a way to systematically produce information about how policy works from beginning to end.
Policy analysis is theoretical but not abstract. It has immediate practical value, for policymakers employ analysis to resolve policy problems and to evaluate whether on balance the policy should be undertaken or not. Even more, policy advocates actively employ it as a potent weapon on behalf of their cherished policies; analysis is a major tool in the modern political arsenal. Policy analysis is an 'applied science' used very widely by decision makers, but it is subject to constant fights over whether its use is impartial, or partisan.
Before anyone can do policy analysis, public policy itself must be understood in its broad American form. This course tracks a broad characterization of American public policy with an introduction to the standard language and methods of policy analysts. A warning: policy analysis is dominated by economists as surely as constitutional law is dominated by jurists. There's certain tribal language and common assumptions one must wade through.. Frankly, some of it isn't simple material (Albert might send his regrets!). But policy analysis in proper usage is a very powerful tool for making public policy better, for avoiding disastrous mistakes, for comparing alternative approaches, and for judging when to stop or start over.
Course Books and Readings: Next down; Top
There is one standard textbook:
Munger, Michael C. 2000.
Analyzing Policy: Choices, Conflicts, and Practices.
New York: W.W. Norton and Co. It's at Southeast Bookstore, at a
reasonable price ($34.95 new). Book web link is:
Welcome
(http://www.wwnorton.com/college/polisci/analyzingpolicy/).
I am shopping at the upcoming APSA meeting for another book
at a reasonable price. If I find one, it will be added. If not, I
will substitute additional case studies. Either way, this Syllabus is
necessary a bit incomplete in the Itinerary. That will soon be corrected.
PS418/618 Course Requirements Next down; Top
Examinations: This course relies minimally on examinations. There is one at end of Week 4, another at Week 9 (per Itinerary, shown below). These are the take-home type, where you get the questions and deliver replies within a week's time. Each exam is worth 100 points.
Oral Presentations and Critiques: Each of you will select a suitable policy for an oral
classroom presentation, followed by a written analysis of the same topic. Under separate
cover I'll write out the details on how this will be handled. For now, note in the
Itinerary that most of the second half of the course is devoted to in-class presentations.
The average time for oral presentation plus discussion is approximately 25 minutes.
Each of you is also expected to serve as critical
reviewer. Here's how it works. When others make oral presentations,
you write notes and then prepare a written critique. The critique is to be
delivered to me (either by email or otherwise) by Monday after each Wednesday's
meeting. I take those to then write a summary critique for the presenter.
The oral is worth 200
points. The written critiques are
worth another 100, so total is 300
points.
Term Papers: Alongside the
oral, you conclude the semester by turning in a written version.
The
typical length of the written paper is approximately 10 full pages for PS418 students, and
20 or more for PS618. On sources, follow
the "ten and ten"; rule. That is,
a term paper should be an honest 10-pager with ten or more sources. Shorter papers and those with few sources are typically the
result of casual or last minute efforts.
Few
can use that approach to successfully perform in a play, run well in a
distance race, maintain a good love relationship, or rise to a new and higher
post in the work world. Neither can
a good paper be written that way.
The written paper is worth 200 points.
Select a topic and clear it with me.
You can start this at any time not later than times outlined below.
Here are dates for steps toward completion of the term paper:
°September 23 (Week 5):
due date for topic selection
°October
21 (Week 9):
deadline for topical outline plus sources (with a minimum of ten separate
sources).
°November 18 (Week 13):
deadline for submitting drafts (I will review and amend a draft if you
choose to turn one in. This is not
required and does not involve a grade, but is just about guaranteed to make for
a better final paper!)
°December
9 (Week 16): final paper deadline
Gradebook
posts interim grades and the eventual course grade on line. Your Username
is your Social Security number. OIS gives you access to a class bulletin board (Forum),
locale to post for posting papers and assignments (Drop
Box),
and personal grade and assignment record (Gradebook).
OIS is run by Center for
Scholarship in Teaching and Learning.
OIS uses automatically generated
Southeast e-mail addresses that you activate via
Activate Southeast Key. I'll use that address to
communicate with each of you.
OIS also generates a set of randomly selected
passwords that you'll receive from an introductory e-mail. These are
specific to this class, and aren't related to your self-selected SE Key
passwords. You can always change your class password by going to
OIS - Change
Student Password and adopting your own. I recommend you employ the
same one as you use for the SE Key, but that's up to you.
Forum participation: Every PS418 and PS618 student is expected to read and contribute to the Forum. I post course information there and comment on the class material. It's an ideal place to post queries about what something in lecture or readings is about, and will help cut down on excessive e-mail. I'll inventory participation and periodically post it on an entry slot in GradeA Gradebook. Credit applies only to meaningful participation, that is, saying something that contributes to our conversation on one or more appropriate topics. Board Value is 6 points per meaningful posting, up to 100 points total.
In summation, we get:
Examination 1 - 100 points
Examination 2 - 100
Oral Presentation - 200
Critiques of Oral - 100
Final Written Paper - 200
Bulletin Board - 100
Total: 800 points.
Expectations of Students Next down; Top
Attendance: Attend each class session unless there’s a valid reason to miss such as personal illness, ill child, death in immediate family, motorcycle wreck, full blown Midwestern blizzard, New Madrid Fault disturbance of 6.5 or greater, or resumption of the Ice Age. Not included: excellent concert in St. Louis, home series of Cards and Cubs, Blues play the Wings, or a POSSLQ or PSSSLQ makes a winsome plea for affection (even if a child!). For those in PS618 who have professional travel obligations, please use email or telephone voice mail to advise if you will miss or have missed class.
On plagiarism: You should review the Student Handbook on the problem of plagiarism. Most of you are familiar with the chronic problem of someone passing off another's work as his or her own, yet it still crops up with distressing regularity. I cannot accept any work except your own. In academic circles, proper recognition of authorship is the coin of the realm. We are all required to maintain the currency. Distinguish what's yours from what is borrowed from and attributed to someone else.
Journal Resources: Next down; Top
Following are four of the leading policy analysis journals, all on Kent Library shelves
for recent years. You are strongly encouraged to peruse these carefully for source
materials on the topic you select for your oral presentation and term paper. The journals are:
°Journal of Policy Analysis and Management
°Policy Sciences
°Policy Studies Journal
°Policy Studies Review
There are also numerous policy analysis sectors to mainstream journals in political
science, economics, history, and the management sciences. These include the American Political Science Review,
the American Journal of Political Science, the Journal of Politics, the British
Journal of Political Science, the American Politics Quarterly, the American
Economic Review, and the American Historical Review.
JSTOR Journals Browser
for Political Science at JSTOR Journals
Browser - Poli Science has nine journals, including the first three named
above. JSTOR Journals
Browser- Economics has 13 more, and JSTOR Journals
Browser - History has almost 20.
Don't overlook the public administration journals, including Public Administration
Review. Those of you in the MAS program should be familiar with that one in any event.
There are also numerous trade journals specific to certain policy domains such as public
health, crime and law enforcement, environmental policy, foreign policy, and public
budgeting.
For locally based issues, go to State and Local Government as a likely source.
It has a generous share of articles with policy analysis.
For treatment of current issues, an outstanding weekly journal of events and policies
in the federal executive branch is National Journal. Where Congress is concerned,
pay special attention to Congressional Quarterly Weekly Report. There are
interpretive articles on public policy in many excellent monthly magazines, including New
Yorker, The Atlantic Monthly (The Atlantic Online), and Harpers. Finally, there are a
variety of advocacy and ideological journals, such as the conservative journal National
Review (National Review Online), the "neo-liberal"
Washington Monthly (Washington Monthly Magazine), and the left-wing
Mother
Jones (MotherJones.com). I recommend serious caution on their use as sources, but they are useful places for exploring hot issues.
I have an open door policy, and can very often be found at or near my office
computer. My office is Room 211L in
the Department of Political Science office suite on Floor 2 of the Carnahan
(Social Science) Building. You can leave messages for me there if I am absent. In general, I can be reached as follows:
a) Leave a message at my Department mailbox or with the department office.
b) Leave a message at the drop outside my door at Carnahan 211L.
c) Place a voice mail message at (651-2692).
d) Email me at rdrenka@semo.edu.
e) If youre out of town and cannot send a paper or assignment by email, then FAX it to
573/651-2695.
f) Consult my
Home Page(http://cstl-cla.semo.edu/renka)
for other details about myself and my courses, including this syllabus.
PS418/618 Weekly Topics and Readings - Fall 2003 Top
° Master Calendar - click at upper left corner for Academic Calendar
Week 1 - August 26, 2003
NOTE: I will be out of town this first week of the semester, participating in the American Political
Science Association's Annual Meeting in Philadelphia, PA. I will return to
town on Monday, Labor Day, September 1. Please understand that I cannot
give you the customary introduction until Week 2. Meanwhile, listed below
is the reading for the class in Week 1.
°Munger Ch. 1 - Policy Analysis as a
Profession - pp. 3-29; and online:
Chapter 1 An Overview of Policy Analysis as a Profession and a Process
Week 2 - September 2
°Munger, Ch. 2 - Deciding How to Decide:
"Experts," "The People," and "The Market" - pp. 30-53; and
online: Chapter 2
Week 3 - September 9
°Munger Ch. 3 - A Benchmark for
Performance: The Market - pp. 54-100; and
Chapter 3
Week 4 - September 16 **
°Munger Ch. 4 - "Evaluation and
Market Failure": Criteria for Intervention - pp. 101-133; and
Chapter 4
** - Take-home essay questions for material from Weeks 1-4 -
due on or before W, September 23
Week 5 - September 23
°Munger Ch. 5 - Experts and "Advocacy":
The Limits of Policy Analysis - pp. 134-161; and
Chapter 5
°Case Study 1 - to be specified
Week 6 - September 30
°Munger Ch. 6 - Democratic Decisions and
"Government Failure: The Limits of Choice by the People - pp. 162-199; and
Chapter 6
°Begin Munger Ch. 7 - The
Welfare Economics Paradigm - pp. 200-237
Week 7 - October 7
°finish Munger Ch. 7 - The Welfare Economics Paradigm - pp. 200-237; and
Chapter 7
°Munger
Ch. 8 - Choice of Regulatory Form: Efficiency, Equity, or Politics - pp.
238-279; and
Chapter 8
Week
8 - October 14
°Munger
Ch. 9 - Discounting I: Expected Values, Probability, and Risk - pp.
280-321; and
Chapter 9
°Munger
Ch. 10 - Discounting II: Time - pp. 322-351; and
Chapter 10
Week
9 - October 21
°Munger Ch. 11 - Cost-Benefit
Analysis - pp. 352-382; and
Chapter 11
°Munger
Ch. 12 - Conclusion - pp. 383-396
**Take-home essay questions for material from
Weeks 6-10 - due on or before W, October
28
Week 10 - October 28 Presentations and Critiques
Week 11 - November 4 Presentations and Critiques
Week 12 - November 11 Presentations and Critiques
Week 13 - November 18 Presentations and Critiques
Week 14 - November 25 Presentations and Critiques
Week 15 - December 2 Presentations and Critiques
Week 16 - December 9 Presentations and Critiques
Final Examination Week - December 16 Presentations (only if necessary); sendoff (food)
Copyright©2003,Russell D. Renka
Wednesday, July 25, 2007 02:36:32 PM