UPL503 THEORY PRACTICE IN PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
Course Code: | 8110503 |
METU Credit (Theoretical-Laboratory hours/week): | 3 (3.00 - 0.00) |
ECTS Credit: | 8.0 |
Department: | Urban Policy Planning and Local Governments |
Language of Instruction: | English |
Level of Study: | Graduate |
Course Coordinator: | Assoc.Prof.Dr. AYŞE ÇOLPAN KAVUNCU |
Offered Semester: | Fall Semesters. |
Course Objectives
At the end of this course, the student will learn:
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major theories of public administration (their underlying assumptions, conclusions about the nature of public administration, and their reform prescriptions)
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political bases of different approaches to the notion of "public interest"
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the history of the practice of public administration
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key concepts used to examine organisational reforms in the public context
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the relationship between the notions of "public interest" and the "urban"
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the role and place of local government(s) in different theories of public administration
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the administrative problems and reform pressures caused by processes of urbanisation.
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the dynamics that shape the relations between central and local governments (and thus dynamics of local government reform)
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administrative issues underlying organisational arrangements in local governments
- how civil society/business and local government relations could shape the practice of local governments.
Course Content
Definition of the discipline of public administration and basic problem areas; discussion of Turkish public administration system and its problems, alternative methods of solution.
Course Learning Outcomes
A student who passed this course will be able to:
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critically analyse current reform proposals for local governments by examining the content of the discourse on "public interest" adopted by those proposals.
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locate the reform proposals and the challenges before local governments to their proper historical context.
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identify the current (and future) challenges for local government practice by detecting their roots in the processes of urbanisation.
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formulate and produce nuanced, empirically oriented research papers to examine:
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the dynamics that shape the relations between central and local governments (and thus dynamics of local government reform)
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administrative issues underlying organisational arrangements in local governments
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how civil society/business and local government relations could shape the practice of local governments.
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- construct an analytical framework to conduct research on "local governments"
- prepare a research proposal in the above regard
- gather and/or produce empirical information required to operationalise a given analytical framework.
- establish connections between a theoretical framework and the empirical material collected via field research.
- offer policy alternatives to a given administrative problem employing a critical perspective.