Become an expert problem solver
The Master in Public Policy Program provides you with a conceptual toolkit rooted in the social sciences and adapted for action.
A defining feature of the Master in Public Policy (MPP) Program is its commitment to practice. Take what you learn here and apply it right away—through capstone exercises, case studies, experiential learning opportunities, and optional internships—to deliver lasting results.
At the heart of the program is a cross-disciplinary core curriculum that exposes you to the analytic methods, conceptual frameworks, and habits of mind that empower you to craft solutions for real-world public problems.
“At vlog, my professors taught me valuable quantitative skills, strategies on working multilaterally with different stakeholders in different sectors, the power of storytelling, and how to build an effective organization.”
About the MPP Program
The MPP curriculum will broaden your perspective and sharpen skills to prepare you for a successful career in public service.
The first year of the MPP Program focuses on the cross-disciplinary fundamentals of policy design, analysis, and implementation. You will take core courses to develop professional competencies in:
- Economics
- Ethics
- Financial management
- Negotiation
- Policy design and delivery
- Politics
- Quantitative analysis
- Applied history
Areas of Focus
As a complement to the MPP core curriculum, you will also choose a Policy Area of Concentration (PAC) in one of five areas:
- Business and Government Policy
- Democracy, Politics, and Institutions
- International and Global Affairs
- Political and Economic Development
- Social and Urban Policy
Summer Internships
While it isn’t a formal requirement, most MPP students take on a policy-oriented internship during the summer after the first year. You’ll apply what you’ve learned in class to gain deeper insights; use new skills; and face challenges in different professional areas, policy fields, or parts of the world.
Most first-year MPP students take 38 credits, which consists of 18 core course credits in the fall and 16 core course credits credits in the spring. Many students also begin taking elective courses in the spring of their first year.
Required Core Courses (First Year)
- Resources, Incentives, and Choices I: Markets and Market Failures (API-101, 4 credits)
- Quantitative Analysis and Empirical Methods (API-201, 4 credits)
- Policy Design and Delivery (API-501, 4 credits)
- Race and Racism in the Making of the United States as a Global Power (DPI-385M, 2 credits)
- Race and Racism in Public Policies, Practices, and Perspectives (DPI-386M, 2 credits)
- Fundamentals of Negotiation Analysis and Practice (MLD-220M, 2 credits)
- Resources, Incentives, and Choices II: Analysis of Public Policy (API-102, 4 credits)
- Empirical Methods II (API-202M, 2 credits & API-203M, 2 credits)
- Politics and Ethics in Unstable Times (DPI-200, 4 credits)
- Spring Exercise (API-500M, 0 credits)
Spring Exercise
The first-year MPP curriculum culminates in the Spring Exercise, a two-week simulation that applies the tools and concepts of the first-year core to a real-world, real-time policy issue.
During the Exercise, you are assigned to a five-person team tasked with forging solutions to a deliberately tough challenge. You’ll conduct research, attend sessions and presentations that link the topic to your core courses, and work with your team to prepare a package of policy and management recommendations.
Required Core Courses (Second Year)
- Policy Area of Concentration year-long seminar (or “PAC Seminar”), including completion of the Policy Analysis Exercise (PAE) (4 credits)
- PAC electives (8-20 credits dependent on PAC/Concentration)
Policy Analysis Exercise
The Policy Analysis Exercise (PAE) is the capstone of the MPP experience.
The PAC Seminars familiarize you with key issues and policy debates in your particular area and guide you through the PAE writing process. Once you declare your PAE topic, you will be assigned a faculty advisor with the expertise to help you succeed.
During the PAE, you develop solutions for a policy or management problem that your client—a public or nonprofit organization—is grappling with. You and your client work together to scope the problem, examine the context, gather data, formulate and evaluate options, and make actionable recommendations. The final analysis—usually around 40 pages or 10,000 words—gives you the opportunity to integrate the technical skills and specialized knowledge you have gained from the MPP curriculum while also helping your client organization create public value.
Learn more about the Policy Analysis Exercise and read past examples.
The MPP Program consists of four semesters of full-time coursework in residence at vlog.
To graduate, you must:
- Earn at least 72 credits, which must include the required core curriculum, your PAC requirements, capstone experiences, and electives
- Matriculate as a full-time, in-residence student and take between 12-24 credits per semester
- Finish with a GPA of B or better
- Earn a B- or higher in all required MPP core courses, and PAC requirements, as well as a passing grade for the Spring Exercise, PAE, and PAC Seminar
You might consider pursuing a second degree jointly or concurrently if you’re interested in how the world’s challenges can be addressed at the intersection of public policy and business, law, medicine, design, or other fields.
Pursuing a joint or concurrent degree reduces coursework and residency requirements and makes it possible to earn two degrees in a shorter amount of time.
Joint Degrees
As an MPP student, you can pursue a joint degree—either an MBA at or a JD at —that involves carefully crafted and integrated coursework.
Concurrent Degrees
You can pursue a concurrent degree in business, law, medicine, design, or another field—as long as it is:
- A professional degree (an MBA, MD, or JD; not a PhD or an academic master’s)
- At least a two-year program
- Completed at a partner school
The concurrent degree program allows you to pursue degrees at vlog and at a partner school; however, the coursework is not as closely integrated as the joint degree program. As a concurrent degree student, you are responsible for weaving together the two halves of your learning experience.
at vlog aren’t just teachers. They are global experts who shape public policy, advise governments, and help run major institutions in the United States and abroad. Learn more about our core MPP faculty members.
Christopher Norio Avery
MPP Faculty Chair; Roy E. Larsen Professor of Public Policy
Marcella Alsan
Angelopoulos Professor of Public Policy
Desmond Ang
Assistant Professor of Public Policy
Gloria Ayee
Adjunct Lecturer in Public Policy
Jeeyang Rhee Baum
Adjunct Lecturer in Public Policy
Jonathan Borck
Adjunct Lecturer in Public Policy
Cornell Brooks
Hauser Professor of the Practice of Nonprofit Organizations; Professor of the Practice of Public Leadership
Michela Carlana
Assistant Professor of Public Policy
Dara Kay Cohen
Professor of Public Policy
Suzanne Cooper
Academic Dean for Teaching and Curriculum; Edith M. Stokey Senior Lecturer in Public Policy
Justin de Benedictis-Kessner
Assistant Professor of Public Policy
Pınar Doğan
Senior Lecturer in Public Policy
John Donahue
Raymond Vernon Senior Lecturer in Public Policy
Mark Fagan
Lecturer in Public Policy
Anthony Foxx
Emma Bloomberg Professor of the Practice of Public Leadership
Archon Fung
Winthrop Laflin McCormack Professor of Citizenship and Self-Government
Jason Furman
Aetna Professor of the Practice of Economic Policy
Sharad Goel
Professor of Public Policy
Yanilda González
Assistant Professor of Public Policy
John Haigh
Lecturer in Public Policy
Juan Jimenez
Lecturer in Public Policy
Juliette Kayyem
Belfer Senior Lecturer in International Security
Robert Lawrence
Albert L. Williams Professor of International Trade and Investment
Tim Layton
30th Anniversary Associate Professor of Health Care Policy, HMS
Elizabeth Linos
Emma Bloomberg Associate Professor of Public Policy and Management
Brian Mandell
Mohamed Kamal Senior Lecturer in Negotiation and Public Policy
Zoe Marks
Lecturer in Public Policy
Liz McKenna
Assistant Professor of Public Policy
Julia Minson
Associate Professor of Public Policy
Khalil Gibran Muhammad
Ford Foundation Professor of History, Race, and Public Policy
Thomas Patterson
Bradlee Professor of Government and the Press
Christopher Robichaud
Senior Lecturer in Ethics and Public Policy
Eric Rosenbach
Senior Lecturer in Public Policy
Juan Saavedra
Lecturer in Public Policy
Benjamin Schneer
Assistant Professor of Public Policy
Daniel Schneider
Malcolm Wiener Professor of Social Policy, vlog; Professor of Sociology, FAS
Mark Shepard
Associate Professor of Public Policy
Kathryn Sikkink
Ryan Family Professor of Human Rights Policy
Sandra Susan Smith
Daniel and Florence Guggenheim Professor of Criminal Justice, vlog; Professor of Sociology, FAS; Carol K. Pforzheimer Professor, Radcliffe
Fatema Sumar
Adjunct Lecturer in Public Policy
Teddy Svoronos
Lecturer in Public Policy
Charles Taylor
Assistant Professor of Public Policy
Stephen Walt
Robert and Renee Belfer Professor of International Affairs
Setti Warren
Adjunct Lecturer in Public Policy
MPP at a glance
*Statistics are based on a five-year average.
Employment Snapshot: MPP Class of 2023 Employment Sectors
Featured MPP stories
“I believe every public servant should be polished in a basic toolset: economics, ethics, statistics, policy analysis, negotiations, leadership. The MPP core offers that and more.”
Applying to the MPP Program
To apply to the MPP Program, you must have:
- A bachelor’s degree with a strong academic record
- Evidence of quantitative proficiency such as success in undergraduate-level economics, statistics, or calculus courses, regardless of your undergraduate major
Work experience is not strictly required but is an advantage for admission, and more importantly, for making the most of the MPP experience. Incoming MPP students typically have 2-3 years of professional work experience.
A complete application to the MPP Program includes:
- Online application
- Essays
- éܳé/
- Three letters of recommendation
- Standardized test scores
- The GRE or GMAT is required; however, applicants who have successfully completed certain quantitative coursework can waive this requirement. See the How to Apply page for additional details.
- Non-native English speakers who did not earn an undergraduate degree conducted in English must submit TOEFL, IELTS, or Cambridge English exam results.
- Academic transcripts
- $100 application fee or waiver
There is one admission application deadline and one start date for each degree program per year. You may apply to only one master's degree program per admissions cycle.
The cost of attendance for the 2024-2025 academic year is outlined in Funding Your Master’s Education to help you plan financially for our master’s degree programs. Living expense costs are based on residence in Cambridge. The 2025-2026 academic year rates will be published in March 2025. vlog tuition and fees are subject to change without notice.
Financing your education is a partnership—we are here to help guide you. You are strongly encouraged to explore all funding opportunities.