The Indian Institute of Technology (IIT), Delhi, will begin a brand new postgraduate programme ‘Master of Public Policy (MPP)’ from the educational session 2021-22 with a give attention to Science, Technology, and Innovation (STI) and growth. The programme shall be provided by the institute’s School of Public Policy (SPP).
Candidates with bachelor’s levels akin to MBBS, BA LLB (Hons), BArch, BTech, BSc (Ag), BVSc, or equal; and postgraduate levels akin to MA, MSc, MPhil, Integrated MSc/MA, MTech or equal are eligible to use. Also, sponsored candidates from numerous industries/ academia/ authorities organisations can apply. For extra info on the programme, candidates can go to https://owncloud.iitd.ac.in/nextcloud/index.php/s/JW8PCPQ8pds6BYo.
Read | IIT-Delhi launches BTech in Energy Engineering, new division of power science and engineering
The programme will give attention to growing important considering, analytical talents, and moral practices among the many college students, equipping them to tackle STI & public coverage points within the spirit of furthering the general public curiosity. Thus, in the long term, this MPP programme goals to produce the human sources required to construct institutional capability and improve political processes on questions associated to STI and the general public curiosity in India and past.
Ambuj Sagar, Head, School of Public Policy, IIT Delhi mentioned, “It will help students understand and contribute to how STI can address developmental challenges in a better way, the importance of which cannot be overstated and will only grow over time. All in all, we believe that this will be an exciting and unique learning opportunity for the students.”
The MPP college students might discover profession alternatives in numerous capacities (consultants, researchers, teachers) at numerous ranges (native, regional, nationwide, worldwide) in numerous fields (agriculture, surroundings, well being, schooling, and entrepreneurship), participating with points pertaining to (however not essentially restricted to) STI and public coverage.