Current Academic Year Course Offerings (2008-2009)
Current Academic Year Course Offerings (2009-2010 w/Summer 2009)
PLS
500. Managing Public and Nonprofit Organizations (3).
Provides an overview of theories of organization, decision making, leadership,
motivation, communication, and conflict resolution in the environment
of public and nonprofit organizations.
PLS 501. Statistics for Public Managers and Policy Analysts (3).
Issues and techniques in data collection and statistical analysis for
managers and policy analysts in public and nonprofit organizations.
PLS 502. Public
Human Resources Development and Administration (3).
The study of policies, methods and techniques utilized in the public human
resource function. Special attention is given to challenges reflecting
contemporary demands in the areas of recruitment, training, compensation,
performance evaluation, motivation, labor relations, sexual harassment
policies, and diversity in the public workforce.
PLS 503. Public Budgeting and Finance Administration (3).
Focuses on governmental budgeting and finance at the federal, state, and
local level. Topics include budget types, budget preparation, politics
of the budgetary process, tax policy, revenue sources, and other public
finance issues. Attention is also paid to specific issues related to budgeting
and finance issues in the nonprofit sector.
PLS 504. Computer Applications
and MIS in Public Administration (3). Theory and
application of the use of information technology to support decision making
in public organizations. Topics include the use of the Internet to share
and collect information, Geographic Information Systems, and appropriate
software packages.
PLS 505. Applied Policy Analysis
and Cost-Benefit Analysis (3). Examines the different
approaches to public policy analysis and the various techniques that an
analyst uses such as cost-benefit analysis. Students complete an applied
policy analysis and present results to a simulated audience.
PLS 506. Research Methods and Program Evaluation (3).
Covers research methods and basic statistics including hypothesis testing
and examines the theory and practice of program evaluation including the
ethical issues related to the practice of program evaluation.
PLS
507. Applied Management Tools, Skills, and Techniques (3).
Examines concepts, techniques, and tools used by organizations with a
focus on improving management skills. Topics covered include managing
meetings, giving presentations, interacting with the media, strategic
planning, performance measurement and contracting.
PLS 508. Ethics in Public Life (3). Examination of ethical principals as they apply to the practice of public administration; basic legal constraints such as conflict of interest laws; role of codes of ethics; and models for the responsible exercise of administrative discretion by public officials.
PLS 509. Leading Public and Nonprofit Organizations (3). Examines the theoretical and practical approaches to leading and managing public and nonprofit organizations.
PLS 510. Political,
Social and Economic Context of Public Administration (3).
Covers the rationales for public policy and critical concepts in public
economics (e.g., market failures, public goods, externalities, monopolies,
information asymmetries, and public choice theory). Class also examines
the public policy process (e.g., context, agenda setting, implementation,
evaluation, etc.), and the legal foundations of public administration
(i.e., federalism, checks and balances, roles of the courts, etc.) and
the basics of state and local politics in the U.S.
PLS 513. Regional Planning, Politics and Policy (3). Explores the connection between formal planning processes and political decision making at the regional and local levels for various policy issues (e.g., rapid development, sprawl, transportation, aging population, affordable housing, rural poverty, economic development, quality of life, etc.). Special attention is given to how planners and analysts provide advice to elected and non-elected decision makers.
PLS 514. Conflict Resolution (3). Examines the theoretical and practical perspectives and techniques for resolving conflict. Emphasis is placed on bargaining, negotiation, and conflict management techniques used in public and nonprofit organizations and interpersonal relationships.
PLS 517. Strategic Planning and Management (3). Examines the theoretical and practical approaches to conducting strategic planning and management in public and nonprofit organizations.
PLS 520. Seminar in Coastal Processes and Problems (3).
Examines various coastal management policies and problems from a variety
of perspectives (e.g., legal, economic, political, scientific, etc.).
PLS
521. Foundations of Coastal and Environmental Management (3). Analyzes key policy issues and the laws, regulations, and legal decisions that influence the management of coastal land use in North Carolina and the United States.
PLS
522. Field Seminar in Coastal Management (3). Field
seminar that uses an applied project to examine the political, economic,
and socio-cultural challenges facing coastal managers. It also examines
the role of science in the policy and management process. Students are
expected to collect and analyze data, prepare a report, and present their
findings.
PLS 524. Managing Coastal Hazards (3). Explores the natural
and technological hazards that threaten coastal areas, the principles
of coastal hazard mitigation and the development of policy dealing with
the preparedness, response to, and recovery from the events.
PLS 525. Managing Coastal Ecosystems (3). Examines programs,
policies, and approaches to managing coastal ecosystems such as watershed
management, ecosystem management, command and control approaches, and
market-based approaches.
PLS 527. Planning Theory and Planning Law (3). Course reviews and provides an overview of this history of the major urban/regional planning theories in the U.S. and Europe. Emphasizes the legal framework and case law connected to local land use policies and regulations.
PLS 528. Local Government Administration (3). Examines the institutions, laws and policies that surround local government administration. It also examines contemporary issues and problems faced by town administrators from a variety of perspectives (e.g., legal, economic, social, political, societal, etc.)
PLS 530. Management Practices in Nonprofit Organizations (3).
Introduction to theoretical foundations, structures, and processes of
nonprofit organizations; historical development and impact, social, political,
legal and economic environment in which nonprofit organizations exist,
and complexities of organizational governance shared by volunteer and
professional staff decision makers.
PLS 531. Resource Development in Nonprofit Organizations (3).
Introduction to various resources important to nonprofit organizations
including financial support, volunteers, and community awareness, and
to the wide ranges of organization activities utilized for acquisition
and maintenance of these structures such as grant writing and fundraising
strategies.
PLS 532. Issues in Nonprofit Management (3). Examination
of the current managerial, legal, and political challenges facing nonprofit
organizations.
PLS 540. Environmental Management (3). Examines selected policies and programs including both regulatory and non-regulatory approaches to environmental management in the United States.
PLS 541. Public Economics and Cost-Benefit Analysis (3). An applied policy analysis course covering basic economic concepts. The class will also provide an introduction to the techniques of cost-benefit analysis. Students complete an applied cost-benefit project and present results to a simulated audience.
PLS 542. Managing Inter-organizational Relations (3). Course provides an overview of the theory and practice of inter-organizational relations. Topics generally include inter-governmental management, collaboration, networks, policy implementation and governance. Emphasis is placed on emerging trends from the new governance movement and the increased relationships between public, private, and nonprofit organizations in government service delivery.
PLS 543. Environmental Policy Analysis (3). Examines the fundamental factors that influence environmental policy in the United States. It also examines the different approaches to policy analysis and the techniques available to environmental policy analysis.
PLS 544. Resource Economics (3). Introduction to environmental and natural resource economics and policy. Emphasizes applied methods and results of use to practicing coastal managers. Topics include pollution regulation and pollution damage assessment, recreation and tourism impact analysis, public good valuation methods, the economics of land development and urban sprawl, and economic issues in forestry, wetlands and fisheries management.
PLS 545. Government Planning and Geographic Information Systems (3). Examines the use of government geographic information systems (GIS) in the context of land use planning and other applications in state and local government. Course provides an introduction to the theory and application of GIS, spatial data collection, relational databases, spatial analysis, and mapping.
PLS 561. Comparative Public Administration (3). Examines public administration in many different countries with a particular emphasis on development administration, the government-administration interface, and the administrative issues of cooperation between two or more countries.
PLS 562. International Environmental Policy (3). Examines major political issues related to national level and international environmental politics and policy-making. Emphasis is placed on democracy, political transition, levels of development, national cultural values, political institutions, and citizens as potential shapers of the nature and dynamics of environmental politics and vice versa as well as trans-boundary interactions and relations affecting the environment.
PLS 591. Directed Individual Study in Public Administration (1-6).
Independent investigation of research problems or directed readings in
a selected area of public administration.
PLS 592. Special Topics in Public Administration (3).
Intensive study of selected topics in public administration. (Repeatable course as topics change)
PLS 594. Practicum in Public Administration (3-6). The
application of knowledge, concepts and analytical tools to contemporary
issues that challenge public administrators. Individuals select special
projects to pursue in local public and nonprofit organizations and conduct
research under the guidance of a faculty member. With permission only.
PLS 595. Capstone Seminar in Public Administration (3).
Synthesizing experience at end of program where key concepts from total
curriculum are integrated and applied to contemporary issues in public
administration. Public administration as a profession and career opportunities
for graduate students are discussed. Student completes an applied research
project that integrates materials from the curriculum and the internship
or practicum.
PLS 598. Internship in Public Administration (3-6). Participation
in a field experience, including a journal and written report critically
describing the student’s responsibilities and experiences, focusing
on linkages between the theory learned in coursework and the practice
of public administration. Field experience will result from a supervised
internship in cooperating public or nonprofit organization.
PLS 599. Thesis in Public Administration (1-6). Prerequisites: at least 30 hours toward completion of the master's degree and permission of the MPA coordinator. Intensive study of a topic selected by the student and approved by a thesis committee. Includes definition of problem, review of related literature, application of appropriate methodology, and interpretation of results and conclusions. Oral presentation and defense of thesis are required.
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