20545 - PUBLIC POLICY AND ADMINISTRATION & HISTORY OF ECONOMIC THOUGHT
DES-ESS
Department of Social and Political Sciences
Course taught in English
Go to class group/s: 31
Course Director:
GIOVANNI FATTORE
GIOVANNI FATTORE
Course Objectives
In the second module of “Institutions, Government and Society” ESS and DES students have the opportunity to understand the fundamentals of some major traditions in the social science through the choice of two blocks.Course Content Summary
- First Block - Public Policy and Administration (Amelia Compagni):
In the second part the course deals with one of the main functions of the State: the generation of public policies. The lectures explore how we understand the process of decision-making and of the creation of public policies. It draws from models of bounded rationality and incrementalism, reaching out to the most recent developments in behavioural public policy, informed by studies in psychology.
The module entails both traditional lectures as well as class discussions about relevant case studies and examples taken from current affairs. It also involves a structured class discussion of a scholarly paper, class associated with a graded take-home assignment.
- Second Block - History of Economic Thought (Luca Fantacci):
The course builds on a direct confrontation with selected texts of major economists, with the purpose of highlighting the explicit and implicit assumptions characterizing their peculiar approach. Preliminary reading of the texts and active discussion in class is strongly encouraged.
The attention is necessarily focused on a limited number of authors, whose contributions represent significant turning points in the history of economic ideas:
- Adam Smith, the theory of moral sentiments and the wealth of nations
- David Ricardo, the principles of political (?) economy
- Karl Marx, the intrinsically revolutionary character of capital accumulation
- Léon Walras, the marginal revolution and the micro foundation of macroeconomics
- Joseph Alois Schumpeter, creative destruction and the role of banks as ephors of capitalism
- John Maynard Keynes, poverty in plenty and the need for monetary refor
- The evolution of economic thought after World War II
Detailed Description of Assessment Methods
For both blocks the assessment and final grade is based on a written exam.BLOCK 1:
- Attending students: The evaluation will be based on a written exam with open questions about the topics encountered during the course (80%) and an individual take-home assignment about a scholarly article that will be then discussed in class (20%).
- Non attending students: written exam.
- Written exam for both attending and non attending students.
Textbooks
Reading material will be made available at the beginning of the course.Prerequisites
NONE
Last change 19/04/2016 16:16