MIDP Curriculum

​​The Master of International Development Policy (MIDP) is a two-year program composed of twelve core courses, including the two-semester client-capstone project, four elective courses, and a professional placement during the summer after the first year. The distinctive MIDP curriculum provides students with advanced skills centered around applied economics and quantitative analytical methods and combines a rigorous classroom education with highly valuable real-world professional experience.

Type of DegreeFormatLength
Master’s DegreeOn-Campus, Full-time2 years

Course Sequence

The MIDP program curriculum follows this course sequence. Please note that all MIDP students spend at least six weeks in a program-relevant professional placement. The average duration is more than 10 weeks and almost all of these experiences are in developing countries.

Year 1

SemesterCourseCredits
FallMcCourt Foundations0
PPOL 5100 — Statistical Methods for Development Policy3
PPOL 5103 — Intermediate Microeconomics for Development3
PPOL 5105 — Social and Economic Development Policy3
Elective3
SpringPPOL 5101 — Regression Methods for Development Policy3
PPOL 5104 — Public Finance in Developing Countries3
PPOL 5108 — Management and Leadership in Developing Countries3
Elective3
SummerProfessional PlacementNA

Year 2

SemesterCourseCredits
FallPPOL 5102 — Impact Evaluation for Development0
PPOL 5107 — Political Economy in Developing Countries3
PPOL 5110 — MIDP Client-Capstone Project I3
Elective3
SpringPPOL 5106 — Sustainable Development3
PPOL 5109 — Ethical Issues in Development3
PPOL 5111 — MIDP Client-Capstone Project II3
Elective3

Required Courses

Core Courses

The core curriculum emphasizes the analytical skills required for designing and managing sound development policies and programs.

Economics & Development Policy (12 credits)

Quantitative Methods (9 credits)

Management and Institutions (9 credits)

Client-Capstone Project (6 credits)

McCourt Foundations

McCourt Foundations is a mandatory course for all MIDP students that occurs prior to the start of their first fall semester. The course facilitates the transition to graduate school for incoming students by developing core leadership and communication skills and fostering equity-centered policy work. 

Summer Experience 

All MIDP students are required to spend at least half of the summer after the first year in a program-relevant professional placement (the average duration is >10 weeks). Most students secure positions with leading development institutions that involve the generation and use of rigorous evidence of impact in developing countries The program covers travel costs and provides a stipend for living expenses so students can complete placements that best fit their interests. 

Past summer employers include: 

Capstone Project

The required capstone project is a client-based group project where students apply skills learned in the classroom to real-world, real-time policy questions posed by clients from leading international development institutions. 

Past clients include: 


Elective Courses 

MIDP students supplement core skills with 12 credits of elective courses. MIDP students use their electives to focus on areas of personal interest such as labor policy, health policy, and environmental policy or to conduct additional research and practice data science skills. Electives in areas of development policy, international economic policy, and methods are likely to be of particular interest to MIDP students.

Sample Recent Elective Offerings

Please note that this is just a sample of recent elective offerings. This list is not exhaustive and availability of courses varies.

Development Policy, including courses such as:

  • PPOL 6009: Monitoring & Evaluation for Development Programs
  • PPOL 6002: International Social Development Policy
  • PPOL 6252: Money/Finance in the Developing/Globalized World

International Economic Policy, including courses such as:

  • PPOL 6255: Latin America Economic Policy Challenges
  • PPOL 6000: Asian Economic Development
  • PPOL 6250: International Financial Institutions

Analytical Methods for Development, including courses such as:

  • PPOL 6809: Game Theory & Public Policy
  • PPOL 6805: Geographic Information Systems (GIS) and Applications in Program R
  • PPOL 6009: Applied Monitoring & Evaluation for Development Programs

Political Strategy and Governance, including courses such as:

  • PPOL 6620: Politics as a Contact Sport: Practical Policy Making
  • PPOL 6605: Policy, Politics & the Media
  • PPOL 6624: Communications for Public Policy

Education Policy, including courses such as:

  • PPOL 6304: Current Topics in Education Policy
  • PPOL 6301: Education Finance
  • PPOL 6302: K-12 Ed Policy Implementation

Health Policy, including courses such as:

  • PPOL 6501: Health Policy & Politics
  • PPOL 6351: The Policy And Politics Of Entitlements
  • PPOL 6500: Health Care Quality: Recent Policy Issues

Technology Policy, including courses such as:

  • PPOL 6617: Innovation in Public Policy
  • PPOL 6707: Disruption, Innovation & Technology
  • PPOL 6814: Policy Issues of Big Data & AI

Environmental & Regulatory Policy, including courses such as:

  • PPOL 6621: Emergency Disaster Management in the US
  • PPOL 6403: Natural Resources & Energy Policy
  • PPOL 6404: Climate Change Policy

Social Policy, including courses such as:

  • PPOL 6361: Disability, Justice, Equity & Policy
  • PPOL 6623: Nonprofit Management and Social Entrepreneurship
  • PPOL 6354: The War on Drugs: Causes, Consequences and Alternatives 

Racial Equity and Social Justice, including courses such as:

  • PPOL 6359: Identifying & Undoing Bias in Public Policy
  • PPOL 4901: Faith, Race & Politics
  • PPOL 6612: Philanthropy, Power & Politics

Management & Leadership including courses such as:

  • PPOL 6619: Leadership and Problem Solving in the Digital Age
  • PPOL 5312: Public Leadership
  • PPOL 6603: Women and Leadership

Public Management, including courses such as:

  • PPOL 6608: Risk Management
  • PPOL 6604: Strategic Planning & Public Policy
  • PPOL 6614: Administrative Burdens

McCourt’s Foundational Skills

McCourt’s Curriculum Innovation Committee has developed a set of core competencies based on extensive research and outreach for all of our degree programs. By integrating these core competencies across our academic offerings, all McCourt students graduate with these foundational skills:

  1. Collaboration
  2. Critical Thinking
  3. Economic Analysis
  4. Engaging with Bias
  5. Ethical Leadership and Management
  6. Evaluation
  7. Policy Analysis
  8. Political Analysis
  9. Quantitative Reasoning
  10. Strategic Communication