English-speaking course
This course attempts to build participants’ skills in analyzing policymaking from two distinct but complementary perspectives. The “Macro Perspective” (also known as the “Structural Perspective”) focuses on broad structural causes of and constraints on policymaking. These influences include the level and timing of economic development, political culture and ideas, patterns of interest organization and interaction with government, feedback effects from past policy choices, and globalization. In addition, we examine political institutions as venues for and influences on policymaking.
A second, “Micro Perspective” (also known as the “Agency Perspective”) on the policy process focuses on the interests and strategic choices that political and societal actors (party leaders, interest groups, heads of government departments, etc.) make in trying to achieve their political and policy objectives while responding to a variety of political and social constraints. We examine strategies such as issue framing, agenda setting, building coalitions among diverse societal interests, and building legislative governing coalitions in multi-party systems.