La Follette School of Public Affairs
The La Follette School of Public Affairs is a public graduate public policy school at the University of Wisconsin–Madison. It offers master's degrees in public affairs and international public affairs, joint graduate degrees with other departments, and undergraduate certificates in public policy and health policy. The La Follette School is housed in the Observatory Hill Office Building and Sterling Hall.
History
The school was founded in 1967 as the Center for the Study of Public Policy and Administration by Clara Penniman, the first woman to chair the university's political science department, making it one of the longest established institutions by type for the specific study of public policy. In 1983 it was separated from the department by an act of the Wisconsin Legislature, which established an Institute of Public Affairs named for Wisconsin governor and U.S. senator Robert M. La Follette Sr. The Institute was upgraded to a School in 1999, and offers a relatively small class size from a competitive international admissions process.Program of study
Two graduate degrees are offered by the La Follette School:- Master of Public Affairs
- Master of International Public Affairs
Students may enroll in joint degree programs with other university departments:
- Law and Public Policy, with the Law School
- Urban Planning and Public Affairs, with the Department of Planning and Landscape Architecture
- Public Health and Public Policy, with the School of Medicine and Public Health
- Energy Analysis and Public Policy, with the Nelson Institute for Environmental Studies
Undergraduate Certificates
The undergraduate certificate in public policy allows undergraduate students at the University of Wisconsin-Madison to apply a policy perspective to their major course of study.Recognition
For 2014, U.S. News ranked the Robert M. La Follette School of Public Affairs #12 in the nation among graduate schools of public affairs.The school is recognized as one of the top-three leaders in the study of cultural and social policy, a field covering sociological elements in public affairs to federal social programs, planning, and implementation, along with the University of Michigan and Harvard University.