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UCLA Master of Public Policy (MPP) Program
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Transcript of UCLA Master of Public Policy (MPP) Program
ImAgIneif you could LEAD CHANGE on major policy issues.
MAstEr of PubLiC PoLiCy (M.P.P.)
|Public Policy
oPPortuNity AND PossibiLity? Limitless.
Work WitH LEADErs in national security,
crime, health, education, labor, and the
environment. | CrEAtE NEW APProACHEs on
issues of politics, race, and social movements.
iNfLuENCE DECisioN-MAkiNG at the highest
policy levels.
Advancing Knowledgein the Public Interest
health, education, environment, poverty, economic
development, crime, social disparities—these and other
key societal issues are inevitably front and center on the
agendas of lawmakers and other thought leaders.
Public
Policy:in Order tO make infOrmed decisiOns and create effective respOnses tO prOblems
that affect society, decision makers at all levels of government rely on the research of public policy
experts to provide evidence-based analysis of the best practices that will benefit society, and the
best allocations of public resources. Graduates of the master of public policy (MPP) degree pro-
gram are positioned to create widespread change on international, national, and local levels; to
become effective leaders in the public, nonprofit, and private sectors; and to improve the lives of
entire communities with well-researched responses to critical situations.
The UCLA Advantagethe ucla public pOlicy prOgram cOmbines rigOrOus prOfessiOnal training in analysis,
a focus on the policy making process, and advanced case study experience to prepare students to
become informed leaders and decision makers. Under the guidance of the Department of Public
Policy faculty—a roster of internationally recognized experts known for its influential research, policy
experience, and high quality teaching—MPP students participate in a wide range of research activities
that advance positive change on regional and national issues. UCLA provides a unique opportunity for
MPP students to take the core competencies taught in the required courses and apply them to sub-
stantive areas through elective and concentration courses taught throughout the campus. The MPP
program is a multidisciplinary gateway that incorporates coursework from UCLA’s top-tiered programs
in Law, Management, Public Health, Economics, Education, Urban Planning, Social Welfare, and other
disciplines. The intimate scale of the UCLA Public Policy program, in comparison to peer institutions,
promotes greater interaction with faculty and creates a highly collegial environment.
master of Public Policy (mPP) Programthe master Of public pOlicy is a twO-year prOfessiOnal degree prOgram. The curricu-
lum consists of core courses that provide students with general analytic tools that are applicable
in all policy areas, and culminates in an advanced, team-based final project that prepares students
for real-world client interactions. For this final project, which is called the Applied Policy Project
(APP), students work together and apply key skills in negotiation, analysis, research, presentation,
and persuasion to advocate a “best” answer for a given policy problem. Additionally, elective and
concentration courses provide content expertise in specific areas of public policy including the
following: crime and drugs, education, employment and labor, environmental, health, international,
nonprofit, regional development, social welfare, transportation, and urban poverty.
Change Agents and Leaders: mPP Studentsucla attracts an intellectually Outstanding and ethnically diverse grOup
of students from all over the world. Collectively, MPP students bring a wealth of experience to the
department from wide-ranging professions including: teachers, political lobbyists, engineers, com-
munity organizers, police officers, government officials, television producers, physicians, news paper
reporters, legislative aides, and military helicopter pilots, among many other professions. They all
share in common a passion to make lasting and effective change in areas that range from local
community levels to the international stage. UCLA students in the MPP program are committed to
remedying social injustices and improving the performance of our governing institutions.
public pOlicy faculty
The Department of Public Policy’s faculty members contribute sig-
nificant, often AWArD-WiNNiNG, PoLiCy-rELEvANt sCHoLArsHiP in their
areas of expertise and have served in a variety of policy positions at
all levels of government. Faculty members also bring a broad range of
disciplinary perspectives to the mPP curriculum including economics,
health, environmental studies, political science, geography, sociology,
law, public policy, and urban planning.
Joel d. aberbach, Professor of Public Policy and Political Science;
Director, Center for American Politics and Public Policy; Ph.D., Political Science, Yale University.
Consequences of the growth of the administrative state; the role of top level federal executives in
the policy process; implementation and effects of Congressional oversight.
helmut anheier, Professor of Public Policy and Social Welfare;
Director, Center for Civil Society; Ph.D. Sociology, Yale University.
Civil society, nonprofit organization, philanthropic foundations, NGOs, globalization and civil soci-
ety, comparative social and cultural policy, research methodology, social movements and networks.
albert carnesale, Professor of Public Policy and Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering;
UCLA Chancellor Emeritus; Ph.D., Nuclear Engineering, North Carolina State University.
International security and arms control, with emphasis on nuclear weapons and strategy; nuclear
energy; impact of technological change on defense and arms control policy.
michael r. darby, Professor of Public Policy and Warren C. Cordner Professor of Money and Financial
Markets; Ph.D., Economics, University of Chicago.
Money and banking; macroeconomics; international finance; innovation; how ideas become products.
J.r. deshazo, Associate Professor of Public Policy, Urban Planning, and Institute of the Environment;
Director, Lewis Center for Regional Policy Studies; Director, Canadian Studies Program;
Ph.D., Urban Planning and Economics, Harvard University.
Environmental economics and policy; local public finance, with applications to urban infrastructure
and protected areas; political economy; financial management of public services.
michael dukakis, Visiting Professor of Public Policy (Winter Quarter Only); J.D., Harvard Law School.
National health care policy reform and the lessons that national policy makers can learn from state
reform efforts.
franklin d. gilliam, Jr., Dean, Professor of Public Policy and Political Science
Ph.D., Political Science, University of Iowa.
Political attitudes and behavior; public policy issues in minority communities; institutional politics;
how television news shapes public debate on criminal justice policy.
neal halfon, Professor of Pediatrics, Community Health Services and Public Policy; Director of the UCLA
Center for Healthier Children, Families, and Communities; M.D., University of California, Davis.
Poverty and children’s health; access to care; child health policy; coordination of services for high-
risk children; special concerns of children with multiple health care needs, including children in
foster care and drug exposed infants.
continued on following page
continued fRoM pReViouS page
sanford m. Jacoby, Professor of Management, History and Public Policy;
Ph.D., Economics, University of California, Berkeley. Employment, workplace, and labor policy;
social welfare policy; the international political economy of business-government relationships.
robert t. Jensen, Professor of Public Policy; Ph.D., Economics, Princeton.
Economic development, issues of poverty, health, fertility, aging and gender.
matthew kahn, Professor Institute of the Environment, Public Policy and Economics;
Ph.D., Economics, University of Chicago.
Environment and urban economics; econometrics; social networks; climate change; energy.
mark a.r. kleiman, Professor of Public Policy; Director, Drug Policy Analysis Program;
Ph.D., Public Policy, Harvard University.
Drug abuse control policy; crime control policy; methods of policy analysis; policies toward
imperfectly rational behavior.
susanne lohmann, Professor of Political Science and Public Policy; Director, Center for Governance;
Ph.D, Economics and Political Economy, Carnegie Mellon University.
Collective action; political economy of central banking; German politics; international
political economy; formal theory; experimental political economy; and computational models
of ethical reasoning.
barbara J. nelson, Professor of Public Policy, Social Welfare, Urban Planning, and Political Science;
Ph.D., Political Science, Ohio State University.
Women, politics and public policy; social and economic policies in industrialized nations; state and
society; organizational theory and behavior; public management; conflict resolution.
public pOlicy faculty
aaron panofsky, Assistant Professor of Public Policy; and Center for Society and Genetics;
Ph.D., Sociology, New York University.
Theory and sociology of knowledge production in science with special reference to genetics.
mark a. peterson, Professor of Public Policy and Political Science;
Ph.D., Political Science, University of Michigan.
Health care policy; American national institutions (presidency, Congress, interest groups); presiden-
tial-congressional interactions and policy making; policy development and decision-making.
meredith phillips, Associate Professor of Public Policy and Sociology;
Ph.D., Sociology, Northwestern University.
Education policy; social inequality; sociology of education; causes and consequences of differences
in academic achievement; effectiveness of educational interventions.
sarah J. reber, Assistant Professor of Public Policy; Ph.D., Economics, Harvard University
Public and labor economics, focusing in particular on both health policy and education policy.
andrew sabl, Associate Professor of Public Policy and Political Science;
Ph.D., Political Science, Harvard University
Political ethics; democratic theory; theory and ethics of social movements; normative analysis of
racial and ethnic categories.
allen J. scott, Professor Public Policy and Geography;
Director, Center for Globalization and Policy Research; Ph.D., Geography, Northwestern University.
Industrialization; urbanization; regional development; relationships between industrial
organization, technology, local labor markets, and location.
continued on following page
continued fRoM pReViouS page
michael k. stenstrom, Professor of Engineering and Applied Science and Public Policy;
Ph.D., Environmental Systems, Clemson University.
Environmental engineering, with an emphasis on computer applications; stormwater pollution
control; institutional barriers to implementing new environmental technologies.
michael a. stoll, Professor of Public Policy and Urban Planning; Department Chair, Public Policy;
Ph.D., Urban Studies and Planning, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Interplay of race/ethnicity, urban poverty and labor markets, and urban economic development strategies.
fernando m. torres-gil, Professor of Social Welfare and Public Policy;
Associate Dean, Academic Affairs; Director, Center for Policy Research on Aging;
Ph.D., Social Policy, Planning and Research, Brandeis University.
Gerontology; the politics of aging; long-term care and services to the elderly; social policy; health
care, Social Security and welfare reform; urban planning issues.
amy b. Zegart, Associate Professor of Public Policy; Ph.D., Political Science, Stanford University.
U.S. foreign policy (national security); presidential power; organizational effectiveness;
international relations theory; American bureaucracy.
lynne Zucker, Professor of Sociology and Public Policy; Director, Center for International Science,
Technology and Cultural Policy; Ph.D., Sociology, Stanford University.
Institutional theory; economic sociology and organizations; science and technology; art and
culture; conformity and trust.
public pOlicy faculty
EMEriti fACuLty
Joel handler, Emeritus Richard C. Maxwell Professor of Law; Professor of Public Policy; J.D., Harvard Law School.
Poverty issues in law and administration; the structure and operation of welfare programs;
client-agency relationships in education, health care, and other areas; welfare reform.
michael d. intriligator, Emeritus Professor of Economics, Political Science, and Public Policy;
Ph.D., Economics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
Economic theory; econometrics; health economics; health care reform; strategy and arms control;
global security; the transition to a market economy in Russia.
archie kleingartner, Emeritus Professor of Public Policy and Management;
Founding Dean, School of Public Affairs; Ph.D., Industrial Relations, University of Wisconsin.
U.S. and international human resource management, including the management of creative
professionals; industrial relations; arts and entertainment industry; worker productivity.
arleen a. leibowitz, Emeritus Professor of Public Policy; Ph.D., Economics, Columbia University.
Health care and health care reform; labor economics; employee benefits; cost and financing of
HIV care; cost and financing of mental health care for children.
daniel J.b. mitchell, Emeritus Professor of Management and Public Policy;
Ph.D., Economics, Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Human resource management; labor
unions; bargaining; wage controls; the labor market and labor market statistics; the impact of
international trade on wages; effects of profit-sharing and mandated benefits.
richard rosecrance, Emeritus Professor of Political Science and Public Policy;
Ph.D., Political Science, Harvard University. International and comparative politics; arms control;
international security; American foreign policy; international economic policy; diplomacy.
charles e. young, Emeritus Professor of Public Policy, Political Science, and Management
UCLA Chancellor Emeritus; Ph.D., Political Science, University of California, Los Angeles.
Public management; fiscal policy; higher education policy.
Skills for Leadership in the Public and Private SectorsUCLA graduates of the MPP degree program have skills that are highly valued by all levels of government,
as well as by nonprofit organizations and private industry. Many hold influential posts in all sectors of the
public sphere, including positions with:
lOcal and state gOvernment: The City of Los Angeles, City of New York, Washington, DC, City of
Long Beach, City of Palo Alto, City of Oakland, the CA Department of Finance, the Bureau of State
Audits, Legislative Analyst’s Office, San Mateo County, Texas Legislature.
federal gOvernment: Office of Management and Budget, Departments of Justice, Education, Trans-
portation, State, Health and Human Services, and Housing and Urban Development.
nOnprOfits and nOngOvernmental OrganiZatiOns: California Association of Public Hospitals,
Relief International, East Bay Alliance for A Sustainable Economy, World Bank, International Labour
Organization, World Vision International, Education Pioneers, United Way, Alliance for a Better
Community, Liberty Hill Foundation.
private sectOr: McKinsey & Company, Boston Consulting, Maximus, Booz Allen Hamilton, HealthNet,
Cerrell Associates, Imperial Investment and Development, Inc., Nike, Inc., Accenture, BizRate.com.
Contact UsAdmissions Information: Nancy Huynh, Assistant Director of Student Services (310) 825-0448 I
Maciek Kolodziejczak, Director of Student Services | Dan Oyenoki, Administrative Specialist,
Admissions Assistant | Michael A. Stoll, Department Chair I Department Information: (310) 825-7667
Costs and Financial Supportstudent suppOrt funds at ucla are prOvided tO graduate students in the form of grants,
fellowships, traineeships, teaching assistantships, and graduate student researcher appointments.
Support based solely on need is also provided, in the form of work-study and loans, through the
Financial Aid Office. A student may receive both a departmental or Graduate Division award and an
award based solely on financial need if the need-based criteria are met.
The Financial Aid Office administers financial support based on need to domestic, full-time students.
To apply for financial aid, submit the Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) or the FAFSA
Renewal Application by March 2. Completion of the FAFSA/FAFSA Renewal Application is required
for all financial aid programs. Financial aid awards include long-term low interest loans and work
study funds. Students may also apply for Federal Stafford Student Loans, which are long-term loans
made by banks and other institutions.
fOr further infOrmatiOn On graduate financial suppOrt,
visit www.gdnet.ucla.edu/asis/entsup/finsup.htm
fOr infOrmatiOn On financial aid, visit www.fao.ucla.edu
current fee infOrmatiOn may be accessed Online at www.registrar.ucla.edu/fees
The cost of attending for 2011-2012 is $21,428.89 for CA residents, $34,129.89 for nonresidents.
infOrmatiOn and deadlines
MPP information sessions are held in the fall and spring. For complete information,
please visit www.publicaffairs.ucla.edu/mppinfo.
MPP Application and Fellowship Deadline: January 10
Free Application for Federal Student Aid (FAFSA) Deadline: march 2
About Public Policy at The UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs“Our gOal is tO change the wOrld. Students who graduate from the public policy, social welfare, and
urban planning programs have the power to provide leadership, to effect remarkable changes for people
across economic and geographical boundaries, and to bring about long-term solutions for the problems
we face in our local and global communities. We’re here to create a better world—one project, one job,
one action at a time.” —Franklin D. Gilliam, Jr., Dean, UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs.
the department Of public pOlicy combines the best of traditional policy education with a flexibility
and responsiveness that enables graduates to remain relevant and influential in a rapidly changing
world. The Department, offering the Master of Public Policy (MPP) degree as well as joint degrees
in law, management, public health, and social welfare—is one of the three departments of the
UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs. Together with the Departments of Social Welfare and Urban
Planning, this academic intersection that is the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs allows for
academic cross-collaboration and a graduate education that values perspectives at the macro- and
micro-organizational levels. Graduates of the master’s degree and doctoral programs are well
prepared to take leadership roles and effect change as practitioners, researchers, and policy makers
in the public, private, and nongovernmental sectors.
department of public policy
3250 School of Public Affairs Building, Box 951656, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1656
www.publicaffairs.ucla.edu/pp