Course 2016-2017 a.y.

30333 - MANAGEMENT OF INTERNATIONAL, SUPRANATIONAL AND NATIONAL INSTITUTIONS


BIG

Department of Social and Political Sciences

Course taught in English

Go to class group/s: 23
BIG (8 credits - I sem. - OB  |  SECS-P/07)
Course Director:
AMELIA COMPAGNI

Classes: 23 (I sem.)
Instructors:
Class 23: AMELIA COMPAGNI



Course Objectives

The course aims at making students aware of the role and relevance that the system of organizations that constitute the public administration fulfils in modern liberal democracies. The course also provides a thorough analysis and reasons for reflecting on the most relevant tools at the disposal of policy-makers and public administrators to design, organize, manage and improve the public sector organizations. The course would like to compare and contrast tools employed at a national level with those typical of supranational and international contexts.

Intended Learning Outcomes
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Course Content Summary

The course employs the lenses of organization and management theory to analyze the system of organizations that constitute the public administration at the international (e.g. UN), supranational (e.g. European Union) and national levels. It explores a series of relevant topics considering different levels of interest: the public sector in its entirety, networks of public sector organizations, and dynamics at play within single organizations. Among the topics the course covers:
  1. The design of the public administration and the main theoretical perspectives for its organization; implications for the relationship between public administrators and politicians and between public administrators and citizens;
  2. The organizational effectiveness of the public administration and its organizations; challenges and problems in the evaluation of the performance of public sector organizations
  3. Choice and decision-making in the public administration; strategic autonomy and space for discretion
  4. Organizational culture in the public sector; issues of motivation and accountability
  5. Coordination and collaboration between public sector organizations and within organizations; issues of conflict and power
  6. Reforms, change and innovation in the public sector; path-dependency and organizational learning.
Frontal lectures are followed by class discussions of case studies and incidences that allow to employ the concepts learnt in class to the understanding and analysis of concrete political phenomena and to the consideration a plurality of viewpoints.

Teaching methods
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Assessment methods
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Detailed Description of Assessment Methods

Attending students
The evaluation will be based on:
  • A final written exam with open questions about the topics encountered during the course (50%).
  • An individual take-home assignment to be submitted to the instructors after the mid-term break (20%).
  • A group project with final presentation at the end of the course (30%).
Non attending students
The evaluation will be based on a written exam with open questions about the topics encountered during the course and the reading material (including additional readings indicated specifically for non attending students).

Textbooks

Attending students will base their preparation on:
  • Slides and material (e.g. case studies) purposefully selected for each class.
  • Selected chapters from textbooks in Organization and Management and Organizational behavior.
  • Selected readings (i.e. scholarly articles).
Non attending students will base their preparation on:
  • Selected chapters from textbooks in Organization and Management and Organizational behavior.
  • Additional readings (i.e. scholarly articles) besides those indicated for attending students.
Exam textbooks & Online Articles (check availability at the Library)

Prerequisites

None
Last change 13/04/2016 11:33