Law and Public Policy

Overview

JD/MPP

Across the United States and around the world, law is a major instrument of public policy. With a focus on domestic policy issues (including but not limited to the United States), Stanford's JD/MPP program provides training in essential skills for lawyers interested in shaping public policy, either as advocates for public or private clients or as elected or appointed public officials.

Stanford's interdisciplinary, experience-based JD/MPP program reflects the way policymakers and lawyers work in the world today. Designed collaboratively by faculty members from across the Stanford campus, the program blends studies designed to build policy analysis skills—such as economics, statistics, research design, and data analysis—with coursework in the student's area of special interest—for example, health policy, environmental policy, or science and technology policy.

A distinctive feature of the program is the opportunity to integrate law and public policy coursework, providing a better understanding of how lawyers can use policy analytic tools to represent public and private sector clients and how policy is constrained and enabled by law. A practicum in which student teams apply their legal and policy analytic skills to a real policy problem caps the JD/MPP curriculum.

Resources

Stanford University offers a wide array of academic centers and programs that concentrate on areas of law with important policy overlap—giving JD/MPP students unique access to a virtual public policy school on the Stanford campus. Stanford's many academic centers provide opportunities to pursue focused interests, attend conferences, meet visiting policy leaders, and get involved in the scholarship that shapes public policy across diverse disciplines. Academic programs of interest to JD/MPP students include:

For access to programs and centers at a glance, please visit www.law.stanford.edu/programs/centers.

Additional opportunities for hands-on experience blending law and public policy can be found through externships, in which they participate in real public policy research; special workshops; the Stanford Law and Policy Society, a student organization; and these publications:

Admissions

You should submit your application to the Law School Admissions office, as applications are first considered by the law faculty committee on the MPP program, chaired by Prof. Deborah Hensler, and then by the MPP program, chaired by Prof. Bruce Owen. Applications will be considered on a rolling basis but must be submitted by May 1, 2008 to be considered for 2008-2009 enrollment.

Law students applying to the MPP program are not required to take the GREs.

Applications for the MPP program

Course Requirements

The JD/MPP program requires a year of public policy core courses, including research design and analysis, cognitive psychology, applied economics, organizational behavior, philosophy, and political science, which JD students normally take after their first year of law school (Students may also elect to begin the MPP program after their 2L year.)

Instructors in the MPP core curriculum assume that students are familiar with calculus, intermediate undergraduate economics, and introductory statistics and probability. Ideally, student preparation will equal or exceed the material currently covered at Stanford in Math 4, Econ 92A or Stat 60, and Econ 50. Students who need a refresher course in math, economics, and statistics may take part in an MPP "boot camp," help in September.

After completing core courses, JD students take a mix of law and public policy courses, including at least three courses in a policy area of the students choice, as well as law school electives such as Administrative Law and Negotiating Public Policy Disputes that satisfy MPP requirements. Students design their policy concentrations in consultation with a law faculty advisor.

The two-year MPP curriculum overlaps substantially with the curriculum of the law school. Joint degree students are awarded credit in each program for coursework that would otherwise be duplicative, up to a maximum of 45 of the 90 units required for the MPP.

Students concentrate in policy studies within the subject matter of their primary degree programs. Joint MPP degrees typically add about one year to the total program of each student. The JD/MPP requires a total of 90 units of approved policy studies, of which a minimum of 45 units is not creditable to the JD degree. Program plans must be created and approved by a designated faculty advisor.