Spring 2002
International Health Care: Issues and Services in
Developing Countries
S. Clark
This course explores the determinants of and responses to
morbidity and mortality in developing countries. After introducing students
to basic epidemiological and demographic research methods, the course turns
to an in-depth examination of several major health care issues, such as
malaria, HIV-AIDS, maternal mortality, child survival, and malnutrition.
The course focuses on the roles of a variety of institutions and actors,
including national ministries of health, international organizations, nongovernmental
groups, donor agencies, and private enterprises in responding to these
issues. Specifically, students examine how these actors have responded
to the various health-care issues, what options are open to them, and how
they can influence and limit each other.
Fertility/Reproductive Health in the Third World
D. Bogue
This course reviews recent trends
in fertility, HIV infection, and maternal and child health in Third World
countries. Remaining “trouble
spots” are identified, and research and theory-based interventions
are discussed that could improve conditions.
Policies and Aging
E. Lawlor
This course examines the historical development of public
policies on aging. Attention is given to the design and delivery of services
and their implications for the social, economic, and physical welfare of
the aged and their caregivers. The unique dynamics that accompany the initiation,
implementation, and impacts of aging policies will also be considered as
students contemplate the design and development of future policy.
Digital Government and Public Policy
R. Miranda
Digital government represents a
broad range of efforts that use modern information technology to improve
the efficiency of transaction and information processing. Government
organizations are major beneficiaries of the information technology revolution.
However, although technology is increasing internal efficiency for governments,
the expansion of the Internet as a medium for economic exchange has raised
new public policy issues—taxation, privacy, and regulation are
but three. This course examines how governments are using technology
both internally to improve administrative efficiency and with external
parties such as citizens and suppliers. It also examines public policy
issues related to the Internet.
Ethics and Public Policy
L. Raymond
This class introduces students to
analytic moral reasoning as a tool of public policy analysis and considers
its limits and scope within the world of public policy. The course asks
whether politics itself is morally distinctive from other areas of life,
and thus, whether it generates a particular set of moral obligations
owing to this distinctiveness. The problem of “dirty hands” is addressed—namely, how one
should act in situations in which there are no purely good choices—with
particular emphasis on the issues of lying and secrecy. Finally,
the course considers the concept of responsibility in contexts likely to
be faced by policy professionals.
Developmental & Policy Perspectives on Children’s
School-Readiness
C. Raver
This course examines “early school-readiness” from
developmental and policy perspectives. Normative and atypical development
in early childhood are covered, as are early educational interventions,
such as Head Start and universal pre-kindergarten, universal and
targeted forms of child care, and current debates over assessment and
evaluation. Students will learn to specify testable questions in the
area of early childhood education, identify and interpret relevant research
that might provide rigorous and convincing answers to those questions,
and translate their conclusions to a policy-oriented audience.
The Politics of Culture
L. Rothfield
This course considers how different
thinkers and different political systems have defined both culture itself
and the state’s
interest in culture. Among the questions to be considered will be: What
counts as culture and why? What kind of power does art, sculpture, and
literature exert and over whom? From the state’s point of view, what
is dangerous in culture, and what is valuable about culture? What
kinds of controls do different states exercise over culture, and what uses
do different states make of culture? Several recent arts controversies
are discussed and comparisons between Japanese, American, and European
approaches to cultural policy are drawn.
Seminar on Comparative Cultural Policy
J. M. Schuster
This research seminar focuses on
themes in cultural policy that can be best illuminated through a comparative
perspective. Drawing heavily on the Council of Europe’s program of Reviews of National
Cultural Policies and UNESCO’s work on culture, cultural policies,
and development, the course explores recent themes in cultural policy
such as devolution and decentralization, privatization and hybridization,
and the rise of alternative funding sources.
Autumn 2002
Poverty, Inequality and Investments in Educations
R. Michael
This course focuses on two topics organized around the issue
of determinants of income. The first topic is human capital investments,
one of the most widely used and effective policies for generating earnings,
and the second is the measurement of poverty and inequality and the policy
issues related to their measurement.
Winter 2003
Public Policy and Infant Development
S. Hans
It has often been claimed that economic
and human investments in children will be most effective when they target
the youngest children. In this course, developmental theory on the critical
role of early experience in children’s development is examined
from an empirical basis. The research basis for key programs and policies
targeting early life are reviewed, including initiatives related to maternal
and child nutrition, child exposure to teratogens and toxins, early intervention
for infants with handicapping conditions, immunizations, infant safety,
father involvement, infant day care, and enrichment programs for infants
with low-income parents.