Learning Outcomes:
By the end of the term, students should:
1. understand the main analytical concepts underlying comparative policy analysis
2. be able to assess competing explanations for variation in policy outputs and outcomes
3. have a good understanding of policy-making in substantive policy areas in cross-national comparative perspective
4. be able to identify current research puzzles and unresolved problems in the literature
Indicative Module Content:
Course content includes:
analytical strategies for accounting for variation in policy content and policy outcomes;
consideration of cross-national variation in a variety of policy areas such as economic policy, welfare state, environmental policy, health policy.