The Department of Political Science offers a Master of
Arts degree in Ethics and Policy Studies (EPS). EPS is a
unique program for students who have already begun or are
planning to enter careers in government, legal or medical
professions, or business, and who are curious enough
to study the ethical questions involved in the making of
decisions in those areas. Such students find that they
can contribute more to their families, communities, and
professions or businesses if they study ethics, policy, and
the relation between the two. Each student in the program
can pursue a specialized emphasis in his or her program of
studies, contingent on the availability of faculty. EPS draws
upon a wide variety of faculty from the UNLV Graduate
College. Emphases may come from such areas as ethics in
business, ethics in government, environmental ethics, and
medical ethics (including health care policy).
EPS students learn about moral and political philosophy,
about political science more generally, and about related
fields in the liberal arts. This interdisciplinary focus allows
EPS students a greater opportunity to study the socio-
political context in which ethical decisions in business and
the professions are made.
Admission Requirements
Applicants to the MA program should click _here_ for an important
message.
Admission to the department is competitive, with only
the strongest applicants gaining admission in any given year.
Applicants must complete the Graduate College online application.
The following
department application materials must be uploaded
into the
online application 1) Graduate
Record Examination (GRE)
General Test
scores, 2) two letters
of recommendation by
recommendation providers 3) a personal statement explaining
why
you want
to enter the
master’s program.
Official transcripts must be
submitted to the Graduate College.
Applicants for
admission must
have earned:
1. A baccalaureate from an accredited college or
university.
2. A grade point average of at least 3.00.
3. Satisfactory scores on the GRE General Test. Minimum
scores are 500 on each of the verbal and quantitative sections
of the
exam; we also consider the analytical writing
score. In unusual
circumstances, students who do not
meet the above criteria
may still be admitted.
Handbook for Graduate Students in MA Program in Ethics and
Policy Studies
click here
Degree Requirements
The following core courses are required:
1. EPS 702, 710, 744, and 750.
2. Twelve credits of electives, (which must be approved
by the graduate coordinator),
six of which may be outside EPS and Political Science.
3. Six credits of EPS 799.
An overall grade point average of 3.00 is required to
complete the degree. Courses with a grade of B- or below
are not counted toward the degree.
EPS 701 3 credits
Critical Thinking
Skills of argument analysis and synthesis, using the logic of
natural language to locate, evaluate and criticize reasoning
in a variety of idioms. Culminates in a topical argument
analysis and concluding synthesis of a more whole, defended
argument. Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
EPS 702 3 credits
Ethics
Focuses on the heritage of Western culture, ethics of the
person and community, questions of conscience, justice, moral
conflict, citizenship, and the issues of consent and dissent.
Work is historical and critical, first on interpretation and then
evaluation leading to student presentation on a problem in
ethics.
EPS 710 3 credits
Seminar in Policy Analysis
(Same as PSC 723.) Aims to enable students to understand
and evaluate a range of methods used by professional policy
analysts, and to present some of the ethical issues surrounding
this practice. Each student required to locate and critique some
examples of policy analysis in his or her own area of interest.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
EPS 712 3 credits
Seminar in Business and Professional Ethics
Exploration of applied ethics, which combines the study of
justice, human rights, corruption, sexism, or racism, etc., with
analysis of existing public- and private-sector practices or laws.
Environmental, medical/health care, business, journalism,
professional, and government ethics may be explored. May
be repeated to a maximum of six credits. Prerequisite: Graduate
standing.
EPS 723 3 credits
Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics
A close reading of Aristotle’s Nicomachean Ethics. Major
themes explored include moral virtue, intellectual virtue,
friendship, and the relationship between philosophy, ethics and
politics. May be repeated to a maximum of six credits.
EPS 724 3 credits
Aristotle’s Politics
Close reading of Aristotle’s Politics. Major issues to be
considered include Aristotle’s political naturalism, pluralism
and regime classification. May be repeated to a maximum
of six credits. Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
EPS 738 3 credits
Organizational Ethics
Focuses on the moral culture of the organization, its
practices, reward and punishment systems, rituals, and
languages. Examines differences between organizations
supportive of or punitive of employees’ intellectual integrity
and moral autonomy. Organization as a moral habitat,
functional or dysfunctional; problems of exit, voice, and
loyalty. Prerequisites: Graduate standing or consent of
instructor.
EPS 739 3 credits
Health Care Ethics
Investigates ethical issues in health care. Philosophical
methodologies that help with complex and controversial
decision including principlism casuistry, virtue theory, and
care ethics. Issues include end-of-life care, informed consent,
access to services, HIV, and organ transplantation. May be
repeated to a maximum of six credits. Prerequisites:
Graduate standing or consent of instructor.
EPS 740 3 credits
Seminar in Organizational and Public Morality
How organizational practices and policies produce moral
consequences. What kinds of organizational responsibility
belong to these practices, and how the person working in an
organization maintains, balances, or loses moral integrity
in such circumstances. Case studies from business,
government, professions and community organizations.
Prerequisite: Graduate standing or consent of instructor.
EPS 741 3 credits
Environmental Law and Policy Seminar
(Same as ENV 703.) Substantive aspects of major federal
environmental laws and their concomitant regulations, as
well as the policy underlying their promulgation and
implementation. The present status and implementation of
the National Environmental Policy Act, the Clean Air Act,
the Clean Water Act, the Resource Conservation and
Recovery Act, and the comprehensive Environmental
Response, Compensation and Liability Act. Examines
policies underlying the existing laws, their derivative
regulations, and changes considered by Congress for these
laws. Prerequisites: EPS 701, 702, or 712.
EPS 743 3 credits
Policy Formation: The Problem of Legitimacy
(Same as PSC 720.)What makes a policy legitimate? Analyzes
the public
policymaking process in terms of such ethical
considerations
as public vs. private good, legality vs. morality,
accountability of policymakers, enforcement of decisions,
and evaluation of programs. Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
EPS 744 3 credits
Citizenship and Public Policy
Examines the meaning of democracy and explores various
proposals for strengthening the life of active citizenship.
Balances academic and theoretical concerns with strategic
and empowering ones. Students develop a working concept
of democratic citizenship and a plan for integrating this
concept into real-world policymaking. Prerequisite:
Graduate standing.
EPS 745 3 credits
Seminar in Public Law and Public Policy
(Same as PSC 733.) Focuses on the role of the courts in
shaping the different policy areas in the American political
system. Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
EPS 746 3 credits
Seminar in Jurisprudence
(Same as PSC 735.)Study of the role of morality in the historical
and recent
debates over the nature of law including: Is a
conceptual
separation of law and morality desirable?; legal
validity;
the justification of the judicial decision; finally, the
importance of jurisprudence in helping to resolve public
policy disputes. Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
EPS 747 3 credits
Seminar on the Public Policy Process
(Same as PSC 721.) Examines the roles of the legislative
and executive branches of government in public policy
formation and implementation. Surveys empirical techniques
used in the field, assesses the impact of ethical theories on
the public policy process and explores selected policy issues
in detail. Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
EPS 748 3 credits
History and Policy
(Same as HIST 748.) Interdisciplinary historical analysis of
American policy formation and failed versus workable
policy ideas. Areas of investigation may include policy
studies in fields such as labor, urban development, minorities
and diplomacy. Prerequisite: Graduate standing.
EPS 749 3 credits
Seminar: Political Sociology
(Same as SOC 776.) Explores relations between states and
social institutions such as social classes, interest groups and
systems of cultural and material production and
reproduction. Covers issues such as theories of the state,
political behavior, and frameworks for development of
solutions to various contemporary problems. Prerequisite:
Graduate standing.
EPS 750 3 credits
Advanced Studies in Public Policy
(Same as PSC 729.) Designing, researching, and writing an
original study in a policy area of the student’s choice.
Attention to issues of both fact and value in the construction
of an intellectually compelling argument. Guidance in
developing a prospectus, a pilot project and a research paper.
Prerequisites: EPS 701, 702, 710, and 712.
EPS 790 1-9 credits
Ethics and Policy Selected Topics
Designed to allow special attention to be given to ethics
and policy problems by way of philosophy, history, political
science, sociology, communication studies, or related
disciplines. May be repeated, with permission, to a maximum
of nine credits.
EPS 794 3 credits
Independent Study and Research in Ethics and Policy
Studies
Program of independent reading and research in ethics and
policy studies, to be selected in consultation with an instructor
before
registration. May be repeated to a maximum of three
credits with consent
of instructor.
EPS 799 3-6 credits
Thesis
Thesis may be repeated, but only six credits will be applied
to the student’s program. May be repeated to a maximum of
18 credits with consent of advisor. S/F grading only.
Prerequisites: Graduate standing and consent of instructor.
Chair
Tuman, John (2001), Associate Professor; B.A., University of California,
Berkeley; M.A., University of Chicago; Ph.D., University of California,
Los Angeles.
Graduate Coordinator
Fott, David S. (1992), Associate Professor; B.A., Vanderbilt University;
A.M., Ph.D., Harvard University.
Advisory Committee
Bernick, Lee (2000), Professor; B.A., M.A., Ph.D.,
University of
Oklahoma.
Fernandez, Kenneth (2004), Assistant Professor; B.A., University
of
California, San Diego; M.A., Ph.D., University of California,
Riverside.
Lutz, Mark (2006), Assistant Professor; B.A., University of Chicago; M.A.,
Ph.D., University of Toronto.
Schollmeier, Paul (1989), Professor, B.A., M.A., Ph.D.,
University of
Chicago.
Titus, Dina (1977), Professor of Political Science; B.A., College of
William and Mary; M.A., University of Georgia; Ph.D., Florida State
University.