Solving Public Policy Problems: UC Berkeley's Eightfold Path

Archived
Course
en
English
18 h
This content is rated 0 out of 5

You can't access an archived course

Conditions
  • Self-paced
  • Free Access
  • Fee-based Certificate
More info
  • 6 Sequences
  • Introductive Level

You can't access an archived course

Their employees are learning daily with Edflex

  • Safran
  • Air France
  • TotalEnergies
  • Generali
Learn more

Course details

Syllabus

  • Defining problems in public policy
  • Constructing alternatives
  • Projecting outcomes
  • Confronting tradeoffs
  • The relationship between politics and policy work

Prerequisite

Recommended: Secondary school course(s) on social studies/civics and/or undergraduate course introduction to government; Basic undergraduate course(s) in political economy and/or microeconomics, encompassing coverage of fundamentals of economic efficiency.

Instructors

Eugene Bardach
Emeritus Professor of Public Policy

Henry E. Brady
Dean and Class of 1941 Monroe Deutsch Professor of Political Science and Public Policy

Jennifer M. Granholm
Adjunct Professor, UC Berkeley School of Law & Goldman School of Public Policy

Daniel M. Kammen
Professor of Energy in the Energy and Resources Group, the Goldman School of Public Policy, and the department of Nuclear Engineering

David L. Kirp
James D. Marver Professor of Public Policy

Steven Raphael
Professor and James D. Marver Chair in Public Policy

Robert B. Reich
Chancellor's Professor and Carmel P. Friesen Chair in Public Policy

Larry A. Rosenthal
Senior Lecturer of Public Policy

Editor

The University of California, Berkeley was chartered in 1868, and its flagship campus — envisioned as a "City of Learning" — was established at Berkeley, on San Francisco Bay. Berkeley faculty consists of 1,582 full-time and 500 part-time faculty members dispersed among more than 130 academic departments and more than 80 interdisciplinary research units. Berkeley alumni have received 28 Nobel prizes, and there are eight Nobel Laureates, 32 MacArthur Fellows, and four Pulitzer Prize winners among the current faculty.

In September 2012, to mark Berkeley's commitment to innovation in teaching and learning, The Berkeley Resource Center for Online Education (BRCOE) was formed. The Center is a resource hub and an operational catalyst for all internal campus-wide and external resources to advise, coordinate, and facilitate the University’s online education initiatives, ranging from credit and non-credit courses, to online degree programs and MOOC projects, including the MOOCLab initiative.

Platform

Harvard University, the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, and the University of California, Berkeley, are just some of the schools that you have at your fingertips with EdX. Through massive open online courses (MOOCs) from the world's best universities, you can develop your knowledge in literature, math, history, food and nutrition, and more. These online classes are taught by highly-regarded experts in the field. If you take a class on computer science through Harvard, you may be taught by David J. Malan, a senior lecturer on computer science at Harvard University for the School of Engineering and Applied Sciences. But there's not just one professor - you have access to the entire teaching staff, allowing you to receive feedback on assignments straight from the experts. Pursue a Verified Certificate to document your achievements and use your coursework for job and school applications, promotions, and more. EdX also works with top universities to conduct research, allowing them to learn more about learning. Using their findings, edX is able to provide students with the best and most effective courses, constantly enhancing the student experience.

This content is rated 4.5 out of 5
(no review)
This content is rated 4.5 out of 5
(no review)
Complete this resource to write a review