877-0101-00L  Technology, Society, Markets and the State

SemesterSpring Semester 2023
LecturersT. Schmidt, T. Bernauer, F. Schimmelfennig
Periodicitytwo-yearly recurring course
Language of instructionEnglish



Courses

NumberTitleHoursLecturers
877-0101-00 GTechnology, Society, Markets and the State
Block course
69s hrs
26.01.09:15-18:00HG E 23 »
27.01.09:15-18:00HG E 23 »
28.01.09:15-16:45HG E 23 »
10.02.09:15-18:00HG E 23 »
11.02.09:15-16:45UNO B 11 »
24.02.09:15-18:00UNO B 11 »
25.02.09:15-17:45UNO B 11 »
T. Schmidt, T. Bernauer, F. Schimmelfennig

Catalogue data

AbstractTechnological innovation is seldom entirely market-driven but often requires policy intervention. This module will introduce the participants into the literature that aims to understand technology and the underlying markets and its interaction with policy and its underlying politics. Besides an academic perspective, it will introduce practitioners working at the technology-policy interface.
Learning objectiveIntroduction:
Participants understand (1) what public policy and policy analysis are, (2) why policy analysis is important for evidence-based policy-making, (3) how policy analysis is undertaken in a consulting firm, and (4) they learn from each other for which current professional challenges policy analysis will be useful.
Technology, Society, Markets, and the State:
Participants understand (1) what the key technological innovations in history have been, (2) how technological innovation unfolds and what factors drive it or slow it down, (3) what role the state (public policy, regulatory frameworks), markets (consumers, firms), and other stakeholders play in this regard.
Political Institutions and Policy-Making Processes:
Understand (1) how electoral systems, legislatures, government, public administrations, the judiciary, and interest groups function and shape policy choices, (2) the role of law, law-making, and law enforcement in modern societies, (3) how the European Union and international organisations decide on and implement policies.
LiteratureCourse materials can be found on Moodle.

Performance assessment

Performance assessment information (valid until the course unit is held again)
Performance assessment as a semester course
ECTS credits6 credits
ExaminersT. Schmidt, T. Bernauer, F. Schimmelfennig
Typegraded semester performance
Language of examinationEnglish
RepetitionRepetition possible without re-enrolling for the course unit.

Learning materials

No public learning materials available.
Only public learning materials are listed.

Groups

No information on groups available.

Restrictions

PriorityRegistration for the course unit is only possible for the primary target group
Primary target groupCAS ETH Technol. & Public Policy: Policy Process (875000)
MAS ETH in Technology and Public Policy (877000)

Offered in

ProgrammeSectionType
CAS in Technology and Public Policy: Policy ProcessModule Technology, Society, Markets, and the StateOInformation
MAS in Technology and Public PolicyPolicy ProcessOInformation