Johnson Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy
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Established | 2007 |
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Director | Kathleen McNutt |
Location |
Saskatoon and Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada 52°8′3.57″N 106°38′24.95″W / 52.1343250°N 106.6402639°WCoordinates: 52°8′3.57″N 106°38′24.95″W / 52.1343250°N 106.6402639°W |
Campus | University of Regina and University of Saskatchewan |
Website |
www |
Established in 2007, the Johnson Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy (JSGS) is the Saskatchewan provincial centre for advanced education, research and training in policy and administration. Located on two university campuses – the University of Regina and the University of Saskatchewan – the school is a source of policy advice and commentary. With academic backgrounds such as political science, economics, sociology, geography, law and education, the school’s faculty members train graduate students in an interdisciplinary environment, educate the public on policy matters, and improve the knowledge base from which policymakers draw.[1]
The school is named after two of Saskatchewan's best-known public servants, Albert Wesley Johnson and Thomas Shoyama. The school offers five graduate programs - Master of Public Administration (MPA, professional degree, CAPPA accredited), Master of Public Policy (MPP, research-based degree), PhD in Public Policy (PhD, research-based degree), Master of International Trade (MIT, online delivery), Master of Health Administration (MHA, online delivery), five Master's Certificates and executive and board education.
The JSGS:
- employs faculty members which include three Canada Research Chairs, one Centennial Research Chair, and one Cisco Research Chair,
- has faculty expertise in social policy, health policy, innovation policy, Aboriginal peoples and natural resources policy, trade and immigration policy, environmental policy, and public-sector management,
- educates students in policy theory, development, analysis and management,
- offers opportunities for students to enhance their postgraduate work with a federal, provincial or municipal paid internships,
- presents opportunities for students to engage with officials from all levels of government,
- offers full-time and part-time study options, flexible course schedules and mobility between the two campuses.
Graduates of the school can expect careers in public sector management and policy research in federal, provincial, or municipal governments; academia; agencies or crown corporations; non-profit organizations; with the media; or in the private sector.
The JSGS offers Executive Education programs for current policy practitioners and public administrators looking to build executive leadership skills, enhance organizational policy capacity and innovative decision making, and improve their personal skill set through sessions that address issues faced by today's public sector.
The school is the academic home for a number of Canadian scholars including:
- Michael Atkinson
- Daniel Beland, Canada Research Chair in Public Policy (Tier 1)
- Ken Coates, Canada Research Chair in Regional Innovation (Tier 1)
- Bruno Dupeyron
- Brett Fairbairn
- Murray Fulton
- Patricia Gober
- Robert E. Hawkins
- Tarun Katapally
- Iryna Khovrenkov
- Justin Longo, Cisco Research Chair
- Kathleen McNutt, Executive Director
- Haizhen Mou
- M. Rose Olfert, Professor Emerita
- Peter W.B. Phillips
- Greg Poelzer
- Dionner Pohler
- Ken Rasmussen
- Jeremy Rayner, Director and Centennial Research Chair
- Peggy Schmeiser
- Keith Walker
- Amy Zarzeczny
References
- ↑ "Our Story". Johnson Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy. 2016-04-25. Retrieved 2016-04-25.
External links
- Official website
- University of Regina
- University of Saskatchewan
- Canadian Association of Programs in Public Administration
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