Public Administration Courses (PUAD)
Related Catalog Entry: College of Arts and Sciences / Public and International Affairs
Related Mason Website: Public and International Affairs (http://www.gmu.edu/departments/pia/)
502 Administration in Public and Nonprofit Organizations (3:3:0). Graduate
introduction to the field of public administration. Focuses on structure, functions,
and processes of the executive branch agencies of national, state, and local governments.
Emphasis on nonprofit organizations as coactors with government in the policy-making/policy
implementation nexus.
504 Managing in the International Arena: Theory and Practice (3:3:0). Theoretical
and empirical examination of the international system that both affects, and is affected
by, the decisions, behaviors, and subsystems of state and nonstate (organizational)
actors.
505 Introduction to Management of Nonprofits (1-3:3:0). Examination of
nonprofit organizations and their role in contemporary society. The aspects of nonprofits
that make them unique are explored to include voluntary governance, tax-exempt status,
nonprofit corporation law, accounting practices, fund raising, finance, and management
of volunteers. Emphasis is placed on the board/executive relationship and the value
of establishing and maintaining a nonprofit organization's reputation.
610 Managing Information Resources (3:3:0).Prerequisite: Admission to
M.P.A. program or permission of instructor. Examination of how managerial and analytical
functions in public organizations can be performed via end-user computer applications.
The course provides in-depth coverage of selected database and decision support packages,
and gives attention to logic and integration of application software.
611 Problem Solving and Data Analysis I (3:3:0).Prerequisite: Undergraduate
statistics course. Techniques and skills available to, and used by, public managers
to solve policy-related problems or to analyze policy-related data. Focus is on problem
definition, research design, and problem solving under conditions of uncertainty
in the public sector.
612 Problem Solving and Data Analysis II (3:3:0).Prerequisite: PUAD 611.
Techniques and skills available to, and used by, public managers to solve policy-related
problems or to analyze policy-related data. Focus is on data gathering and analysis,
use of computers, systems theory and analysis, and operations research.
615 Administrative Law (3:3:0). Law as a guiding and controlling force
in public-sector operations. The course covers application of legal processes to
administrative practices and situations, and administrative determination of private
rights and obligations.
620 Organization Theory and Management Behavior (3:3:0). Consideration
of behavior within the context of public organization and the consequent changes
required in management. Focus on such issues as perception, attitude formation, motivation,
leadership, systems theory, communication and information flow, conflict theory,
and decision theory.
621 Principles and Practices in Government Organization and Management (3:3:0).
Prerequisite: PUAD 620. Major management theories applicable to the American federal
system. Emphasis is on organization, structure, and operations. The relationship
of theories to management practices in contemporary American administration is explored.
622 Program Planning and Implementation (3:3:0).Prerequisite: PUAD 620.
Practical exploration of implementing public law in the American federal system.
Construction of organizational apparatus, development of operational plans, and systems
of control and evaluation necessary to implement government programs are studied.
Emphasis is on coordinating tasks and resources required for effective program implementation.
632 The Political Economy of Development (3:3:0). Design, implementation,
and evaluation of development projects and programs, with emphasis on management
and organizational strategies and processes to accomplish development goals. Particular
attention is given to socioeconomic-political environments and organizations'
structures and routines in the Third World context.
634 Management of International Security (3:3:0). Examination of theory
and practice of managing international security. Emphasis is on interplay of organizational
structure and bureaucratic dynamics in the international context. Theory and practice
of crisis management, and coordination and comparison of security methods and techniques,
are presented.
635 Selected Problems of Development (3:3:0).Prerequisite: Graduate standing
or permission of department. Third World development problems, including development
management, a new international economic order, foreign aid, multinational corporations,
and international organizations. May be repeated with permission of department.
636 The NGO: Managing the International Nonprofit Organization (1-3:3:0).
The unique aspects of nonprofit organizations operating in international environments,
particularly in relief and development work. The relationship between the NGO and
U.S. and foreign governments is examined. International philanthropy, cross-cultural
understanding, and key managerial concerns such as communications, planning, human
resource management, control, group process, and project evaluation are covered.
640 Public Policy Process (3:3:0). Processes of making public policy, including
detection of public issues, consideration of alternatives, and adoption and implementation
of solutions. The course highlights the major actors in the policy process, as well
as the environment within which they work.
643 Public Policy Research (3:3:0).Prerequisite: PUAD 640. Examination
of major concepts, designs, and methods used in applied policy research. The underlying
logic of policy inquiry, and the use of quantitative and qualitative techniques,
is explored. The course includes case applications of each of the major styles of
inquiry, and the steps in planning, administering, and reporting policy research.
644 Public Policy Models (3:3:0).Prerequisite: PUAD 640. Approaches to
modeling policy problems. The course includes an analysis and comparison of the dominant
paradigms in the policy sciences. The assumptions and implications of different models
and their utility for analysis, implementation, and evaluation are reviewed.
651 Administration in the Commonwealth of Virginia (3:3:0).Prerequisite:
PUAD 502.Cultural, demographic, constitutional, and socioeconomic environment of
public administration in Virginia. Governmental agencies, legislative functions,
executive leadership, staff agencies, state-local relationships, intrastate regionalism,
and administrative customs peculiar to Virginia are covered.
660 Public and Nonprofit Accounting and Finance (3:3:0). Survey of public
financial management focusing on governmental accounting, financial reporting, budget
and revenue administration, debt management, cash and investment management, pensions
and employee benefits, and risk management.
661 Public Budgeting Systems (3:3:0). Survey focusing on the policy and
theoretical framework of revenue and expenditure choices at all levels of government.
Topics include development, theories, and structure of budgeting; political, economic,
and managerial aspects of public budgeting; public policy implications; and budgetary
reform movements and their successes and failures.
664 Advanced Topics in Nonprofit Budgeting and Accounting (1-3:3:0).Prerequisite:
PUAD 660. Focus on fiscal management for nonprofit organizations. Attention is given
to basic double-entry accounting, fund accounting for nonprofits, and control issues
in management. Students learn to read financial statements and examine such issues
as investment policies, endowment management, and reporting to grant sources. Budget
theory and process with special emphasis on the policy and human resource implications
of budgeting in nonprofit organizations are discussed.
670 Personnel Administration in the Public Sector (3:3:0).Prerequisite:
PUAD 502. Public and private personnel management and the historical development
of the civil service. Emphasis is on processes involved in selection and management
of personnel in public organizations. Selected problems and their impact on public
personnel systems are presented.
671 Public Employee Labor Relations (3:3:0). Public employee labor relations,
including unionization, representational elections, bilateral policy negotiations,
administration of agreements, management rights, union and membership security, the
strike issue and grievance procedures, impact on public administration, and assessment
of future developments.
672 Methods in Public Personnel Management (3:3:0).Prerequisite: PUAD
670. Introduction to some of the more important basic methods used in public personnel
management and administration, including workforce planning and analysis, job evaluation
and compensation, examination and selection, workforce management, and training and
development.
681 The Community, Media Relations, and Fund Raising (1-3:3:0). The interface
between the nonprofit organization and the community is critical to the organization's
success. The course focuses on marketing and communications issues as they apply
to the nonprofit's identification of its market, ability to raise money, and
reputation and image within the community. Crisis management, public writing and
speaking, building of positive relationships with the media, and development of external
funding sources are discussed.
700 Ethics and Public Administration (3:3:0). To be taken in the final
two semesters of the M.P.A. program. Topics of ethical dimensions including constitutionalism,
democratic values and traditions, standards of conduct and ethics, and conflicting
values of public officials and social equity of public programs.
701 Cross-Cultural and Ethical Dimensions of International Management (3:3:0).
To be taken in the final two semesters of the M.P.A. program. Examination of normative
issues in management of programs in international context. Emphasis is on interplay
of cultural, sociopolitical, legal, and ethical factors and on management and policy
problems arising from conflicting goals, values, and inequities among nations and
regions.
702 Nonprofit Law, Governance, and Ethics (1-3:3:0). Overview of nonprofit
governance as well as basic contract, labor, and tax law issues within nonprofit
corporation law. The relationship between the board and the executive is covered,
and ethics topics typical to nonprofit organizations such as self-dealing, fiduciary
responsibility, and human resource issues.
720 Performance Evaluation for Managers (1-3:3:0). Methods used by managers
to systematically assess performance. The course includes practical tools such as
focus groups, survey research, cost/benefit analysis, benchmarking, and comparison
methods for revealing outcomes and impacts. The course prepares managers to use information
more effectively in developing programs and services and formulating policy, and
covers reporting techniques to communicate performance results.
727 Seminar in Risk Assessment and Decision Making (3:3:0).Prerequisite:
12 graduate credits. Examination of decision making under risk and uncertainty. Readings
introduce the major intellectual perspectives on the topic and are drawn from a variety
of disciplines, including biology, economics, law, and psychology. Emphasis is on
making actual decisions under uncertainty.
729 Issues in Public Management (1-3:1-3:0).Prerequisites: PUAD 502 and
nine graduate credits. May be repeated with different topic. Current issues in management
of public organizations in contemporary American government. Practical applications
of theories and analysis to managerial problems are included. Competence in improving
management in selected government settings is emphasized.
730 Professional Development Workshop (1-3:1-3:0). Exploration of external
and internal factors that are reshaping public and nonprofit organizations. Investigation
of processes and techniques that managers and staff can use to respond to rapid environmental
change. Emphasis is placed on case studies and the application of techniques and
processes.
731 International Political Economy (3:3:0).Prerequisite: 12 graduate
credits. Theories and issues pertaining to the production and distribution of wealth
and power in the modern world. The course explores the history of political economy
as a field of study and applies concepts to current issues.
732 Managing Technology Transfer (3:3:0).Prerequisite: 12 graduate credits.
Examination of how governments, businesses, and international organizations manage
cooperation and competition in the transfer of technology. Case studies on East-West,
West-West, and North-South relations are included.
733 Managing International Competition and Cooperation (3:3:0).Prerequisite:
12 graduate credits. Alternative perspectives on the role of the public sector in
stimulating international economic development. Emphasis is on the role that governing
institutions can play both to promote the productivity of businesses within the United
States, and to facilitate cooperation in the international arena.
738 Issues in International Security (1-3:3:0).Prerequisites: PUAD 504
and nine graduate credits. May be repeated with different topic. Examination of issues
of topical interest in the general area of international security. Possible topics
include nuclear strategy, disarmament, American defense policy, and international
terrorism.
739 Issues in International Management (1-3:3:0).Prerequisite: PUAD 502
and 9 graduate credits. Examination of significant current issues in public international
management. Emphasis is on practical applications of theories and analysis of problems
in the public international management arena. Competence in improving management
practices in international management settings.
741 Policy Analysis (3:3:0).Prerequisite: PUAD 502, 611, 612, and 640.
Introduction of concepts and techniques for formal policy analysis, development of
skills in applying policy analysis techniques through case studies, and exploration
of the legitimacy and utility of policy analysis.
742 Program Evaluation (3:3:0).Prerequisite: PUAD 502 and 611. Practical
exploration of assessment techniques used in studying the results of public programs
and policies, including evaluation of implementation strategies and impacts. The
course draws on multiple approaches such as cost analysis, field research, experiments,
productivity analysis, surveys and questionnaires, and qualitative studies.
749 Issues in Public Policy (1-3:3:0).Prerequisite: PUAD 502 and nine
graduate credits. Examination of significant current issues in public policy in contemporary
American government. Emphasis is on practical applications of theories and analysis
to policy problems. Competence in improving policy analysis in selected government
settings is also emphasized.
750 Changing Patterns of Governance (3:3:0).Prerequisite: PUAD 502 and
nine graduate credits. Examination of broad trends in governance, including both
the theory and practice of various governance choices. These choices include privatization,
decentralization of governmental activity, grants-in-aid and growth of mandates,
changing role of state and local governments, proposals for reforming federalism,
and regulatory reform.
759 Issues in Local Government Administration (1-3:3:0).Prerequisites:
PUAD 502 and nine graduate credits. May be repeated with different topic. Management
and policy formulation in American local governments. The course addresses environments,
institutions, and actors involved. Contemporary problems such as education, criminal
justice, transportation, land use, economic development, and environmental impact
are examined.
769 Issues in Public Financial Management (1-3:3:0).Prerequisite: PUAD
502 and nine graduate credits. Current issues in budgeting and financial management
in contemporary American government. Practical applications of administration and
management issues and policy choices at all levels of government are emphasized.
794 Internship (1-6:0:0).Prerequisite: 21 PUAD credits or permission of
instructor. Open only to M.P.A. Students. Contact internship coordinator one semester
before enrollment. Work-study programs with specific employers. Credit is determined
by the department.
796 Directed Readings and Research (1-3:0:0).Prerequisites: 21 PUAD credits
and permission of instructor. Reading and research on a specific topic under the
direction of a faculty member. A written report is required; oral examination over
the research and report may be required. May be repeated once.
798 Research Project (1-3:0:0).Prerequisites: 21 PUAD credits and permission
of instructor. Completion of an original research project related to public-sector
administration. On the basis of the approved research design, each student prepares
and defends a final report that is the result of the research project. The final
report must be approved by the department.
801 Philosophical Theories of Political Communities (3:3:0).Prerequisite:
Acceptance into doctoral program.Philosophical understandings of political states,
authority, and community. Emphasis is on theories that have been most influential
in the tradition of Western thought.
804 Conduct of Social Inquiry I: Research Design (3:3:0). Assumptions and
logic of different research designs and data collection techniques and research as
an exercise in theory building. The course is designed to enable candidates to do
original research and to critique the research of others.
805 Conduct of Social Inquiry II: Quantitative Analysis (3:3:0).Prerequisite:
Course in statistical analysis. Data collection and analysis using a statistical
computer software package. Emphasis is on causal analysis.
821 Doctoral Seminar in Theories of Organization and Bureaucracy (3:3:0).
Prerequisite: PUAD 620 or equivalent, or permission of instructor. Examination of
key issues in organization theory and behavior. Issues include organization design,
interorganizational coordination, intelligence and decision-making systems, leadership
and motivation theories, and theories or organizations as agents of political and
social change. Case studies are used.
823 Doctoral Seminar in Policy Analysis and Evaluation (3:3:0).Prerequisite:
Permission of instructor and advisor. Quantitative and qualitative approaches and
techniques used in recognizing, defining, and assessing public issues and problems.
Conceptualizing and assessing problems, employing and judging the strengths and weaknesses
of tools and techniques, and identifying and categorizing the information required
for competent analysis and evaluation are studied.
824 Models of Policy Design and Implementation (3:3:0).Prerequisite: Permission
of instructor or advisor. Approaches to the analysis of public policy, including
the role of values in policy analysis, assumptions in modeling policy problems, the
organizational context of policy studies, and institutions for designing and implementing
policies.
825 Doctoral Seminar: Current Issues in Public Management (3:3:0).Prerequisite:
Permission of instructor and advisor. Major issues confronting public management,
such as restructuring organizations, strategic management, leadership, and performance
reviews. Analysis of current proposals for reform of public management.
840/PUBP 840 Research Seminar in Policy Governance I (2:2:0) to (4:3:1) (variable
credit).Prerequisite: Admission into Ph.D. Public Policy program. A survey of
the major institutions that formulate and implement public policy in the United States.
The course examines translation of public preferences into public policy and decisions
about which societal and economic functions are most appropriately carried out by
governments and which are best accomplished by private institutions and individuals.
841/PUBP 841 Research Seminar in Policy Governance II (2:2:0) to (4:3:1).
This course is the second of a two-semester sequence (PUAD 840, 841) in the governance
and public management policy concentration. The division of responsibilities between
the several levels of government and between the public and private sectors. The
course focuses on the impact of these divisions on the development of public policy
in several policy areas, such as urban governance, environmental policy, and health
care.
998 Doctoral Proposal Research (1-6:0:0).Prerequisite: Permission of advisor.
Work on a research proposal that forms the basis for a doctoral dissertation.
999 Doctoral Dissertation (1-24:0:0).Prerequisite: Permission of participant's
dissertation committee. Registration for the total credits may be spread over a multisemester
contiguous period. Ph.D. candidates must register for at least three credits each
semester until the dissertation is completed.
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