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The U.S. Congress and Law Making
DPI 120

Jointly Offered with: Harvard Law School as HLS 2251

Course Information

Description

The United States Congress is in disarray - in crisis after decades of polarization and the centralization of power in the Executive Branch. The U.S. Congress and Lawmaking blends political science theory and practical exercises at every stage. We use topical cases and active simulations to prepare students to succeed in their future work within the U.S. Congress and U.S. state legislatures.  Taught by the faculty chair of Harvard's Bipartisan Program for Newly Elected Members of Congress, this course puts students in the midst of legislative politics through academic readings and real-world cases. The course begins with the theory and history of legislatures and ends with a simulation involving lobbyists, journalists, and would-be legislators. It is ideal for anyone considering working with the Congress or state legislatures.

Course Notes

Also offered by the Harvard Law School as 2251.

School Harvard Kennedy School
Credits 4
Cross Reg

Available for Harvard Cross Registration

Department HKS Government
Course Component Lecture
Instruction Mode In Person
Grading Basis HKS Letter Graded
Academic Areas Democracy, Politics, and Institutions