For many of us, our interest in policy—wondering about the world and how to make it better—began at a young age.
These types of questions, and so many others, are what motivate the faculty, students, and staff of the Department of Public Policy. They drive faculty and student research, frame our courses, and provoke our engagement with the larger community through seminars, public lectures, and the media. As a close-knit community sharing and contributing to ideas and solutions far beyond the Luskin School of Public Affairs, we tackle tough issues and ask questions such as: Where is the science on climate change and what would be the best strategies for anticipating and addressing its myriad impacts in Los Angeles, the U.S., and abroad? What is working, what is failing in public education, and which policy options, by which decision makers, hold the promise of fulfilling the commitment to provide a high-quality education to all, regardless of a student’s background and zip code? What policy interventions would empower a more accessible and cost-effective health care system—the most expensive yet least inclusive in the world—while also promoting general population health and mitigating distressing disparities by race and ethnicity? How do incentives shape risk-taking behavior of families and individuals in a multitude of settings in developing countries and how can they be influenced to augment individual opportunities and social welfare? What social, economic, and political factors foster enduring poverty and growing inequality, and what kinds of policy shifts would be likely to reverse these dynamics? The list of pressing concerns and the supply of possible remedies are enormous, complex, and challenging. All call for detailed knowledge, sophisticated instruments of analysis, and innovative action.
That is how our faculty conduct their research and the basis for which they train our Master of Public Policy students, a group striking in their diversity, academic accomplishments, passion for justice, and dedication to employing knowledge, evidence, analysis, and leadership to transform the world. The Department of Public Policy offers a rigorous and challenging program that provides the analytical tools and strategic orientation that one needs to be a leader in identifying policy problems, designing new policies and organizations, advocating their adoption, managing their implementation, and evaluating their impact. Our Master of Public Policy program combines the best of traditional policy education with a flexibility and responsiveness that enables our graduates to remain relevant and influential in a rapidly changing world. A career in public service, with its commitment to the public interest, is no longer limited to working in government. Increasingly, policy making and implementation involve nonprofit and for-profit institutions, often working together and in conjunction with government agencies. By setting the highest standards of excellence and giving students a diversified tool kit of quantitative and analytical skills, and the flexibility to design a program of study that incorporates the vast intellectual resources of one of the nation’s top research universities, we produce graduates who are equipped to become real leaders in policy making, wherever that process takes place.
For those of you who are considering graduate education in public policy, I invite you to examine closely the exciting prospect of earning your degree at UCLA. Click on “Why Get Your MPP at UCLA?” and gain ready entrée to the collective attributes of our Department and program, the Luskin School of Public Affairs, the UCLA campus, and being situated in California and Los Angeles that make applied policy training here so enticing. You will see why so many community organizers, teachers, doctors, legislative aides, military veterans, television writers and producers, political activists, budding analysts, journalists, Japanese ministry officials, staff of nonprofit organizations, entrepreneurs, and professionals of all kinds—both those some years into their careers and others relatively fresh out of their undergraduate studies, and from the U.S. and nations around the world—have come to UCLA. Our students have undergraduate majors that cover the gamut of fields in the social sciences, such as anthropology, economics, history, political science, psychology, and sociology. Well beyond that, we have welcomed a wide range of Liberal Arts majors in areas like philosophy, English, comparative literature, foreign languages, and even the classics, as well as astrophysics, biology, chemistry, computer science, and statistics. Our graduates have gone on to appointments in about a dozen U.S. cabinet-level departments, OMB, many other agencies, and the Foreign Service; multiple California state departments and agencies; more than twenty counties and cities from California to Asia; nonprofits from community-based organizations to AARP, the Children’s Defense Fund, Consumers Union, the Sierra Club, and the United Way; major policy research institutions like RAND, Mathematica Policy Research, and the Urban Institute; and firms from Booze Allen Hamilton and Deloitte Consulting to Grupo Salinas and Fox Studios. They have even run for and held elective office. In short, at UCLA we prepare you to take on the world.
Robert Fairlie
Department Chair
Professor of Public Policy
Vision and Mission
VISION: To improve the quality of decision-making and execution on matters of public concern.
MISSION: The Mission of the Department of Public Policy is to enhance both the range of ideas and knowledge about how to deal with public problems and improve the skills of those who deal with them professionally, by conducting research directed to public issues, educating public policy professionals, and partnering with public servants and the community to disseminate and apply new and existing knowledge for solving public problems.
GOALS: It is the goal of the Department of Public Policy to improve the quality of decisions made about matters of public interest through research, teaching, and service at the local, state, national and international level.
RESEARCH AIMS:
- Promote and engage the faculty’s scholarly expertise to address problems of public concern.
- Understand and improve the performance of public, non-profit, and business institutions in the United States and globally.
EDUCATIONAL AIMS:
- Enroll a talented, accomplished, and diverse group of individuals committed to careers in public service.
- Deliver a Master’s-level education program that provides students with a robust set of analytic and decision-making skills that they can use to address a wide range of policy questions and that encourages students to understand policy issues from a variety of intellectual perspectives. These skills empower our graduates to tackle today’s challenges as well as policy issues that emerge in the future.
- Expose undergraduate students to public policy issues and teach them basic analytic tools.
- Develop professionals who will take on leadership roles in public, non- profit, and private institutions.
- Assist students in obtaining advanced professional positions in public, non-profit, and private organization.
SERVICE AIMS:
- Collaborate with members of the greater applied research community to analyze and develop effective solutions to important public policy questions.
- Collaborate with the governmental, non-profit, and business communities to enhance the availability of skilled professionals and to address specific public policy problems.
- Collaborate with colleagues at UCLA and in the University of California system to ensure adherence to the highest standards of personnel recruitment and institutional performance.
CONTINUOUS IMPROVEMENT AIMS: The Department commits to maintain a self-reflective organizational environment engaged in ongoing evaluation, assessment, and improvement.