Business and Government (PPMN90056)
Graduate courseworkPoints: 12.5On Campus (Parkville)
Overview
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The respective roles, responsibilities and sources of power characterizing relationships between business and government play a crucial role in shaping public policy and regulation, within and between countries. Because of its productive function, business often enjoys a privileged position with government, while a major goal of policy and regulation at national and international levels is to steer and regulate business activity. Relationships between business and government vary significantly in different countries, economic sectors, and over time, and the conceptual tools for understanding them remain subject to widespread debate. This subject critically reviews contemporary policy debates and scholarly research, and draws on contrasting case examples to explore theoretical, normative and practical implications of business-government relationships. Particular attention is given to debates about government-business relationships associated with processes of public policy formation and implementation, social and environmental regulation, and delivery of public services and infrastructure. On completion of the subject, students should have a strong critical understanding of debates about the character and inter-relationship of business and government, from a comparative and international perspective.
Intended learning outcomes
Students who complete this subject should be able to:
- Explain theoretical, practical and normative implications of business-government relationships drawing on scholarly literature and contemporary policy debates
- Compare business-government relationships between different countries, economic sectors and over time using relevant conceptual tools
- Reflect critically on the changing roles, responsibilities and sources of power that characterise relationships between business and government
- Design public policy proposals to solve real-world policy and/or regulatory dilemmas concerning complex business-government interactions.
Generic skills
Students who complete this subject should be able to:
- Apply theory, research skills and critical reasoning to case study analysis
- Communicate effectively in oral and written form
- Construct coherent arguments using appropriate evidence
- Collaborate with others and work autonomously.
Last updated: 4 March 2025