Case 1
2 years ago
18
Case1.docx
GradingRubricofMemorandum.pdf
Example2ofwrittenmemo.pdf
Example1ofwrittenmemo.pdf
- M6.Caseofsocialequity--HalfofLoaf2.pdf
Case1.docx
Due 9/21/2024
Submit the written memo, which should be 3 pages in length.
This assignment requires students to demonstrate in-depth analyses for their self-selected case (Half of Loaf) with a memo format.
To address each case, the recommended structure and expected responses are listed as below:
· Basic information (headings). At the beginning of each memo, students must indicate (1) the recipient, (2) the student’s role, and (3) the memo’s subject.
· Abstract. An abstract should be the first component of each memo which summarizes the self-selected case, including its background, controversies, analyses, and recommendations
· Introduction. Students must "briefly" introduce the context of selected case (i.e., background and outcome) and the relevance to the field of public administration.
· Discussion. This section is the most important section of this memo. Students should clearly indicate those controversial or important issues involved in the selected case. For example, to analyze an initiative of work-from-home policy, students can respectively examine the potential pros and cons.
· Recommendation. Based on the discussion section, students should provide concrete recommendations for the given case. In addition, these recommendations should also be based on our class readings.
· References. Students must provide a list of references at the end of each memo, following the APA format to indicate the cited sources.
GradingRubricofMemorandum.pdf
Public Administration in Theory and Application
PUB 5409
Grading Rubric for Memorandum
Category Scoring Criteria Total
Points %
Content
• Abstract can strategically summarize the overall
memorandum/case.
• Within the section of introduction, the selected
case is clearly described and links to the weekly
topic.
• The discussion section can clearly and
comprehensively include pros and cons for each
the controversial/important issue in this self-
selected case.
• The provided suggestions are reasonable and
supported by empirical evidence or literature.
• Students can appropriately respond to those pre-
identified questions of this assignment.
6 60%
Organization
• Information is presented in a logical sequence.
• Materials included are relevant to the overall
message/purpose.
• The memo is formatted based on the
recommended structure.
2 20%
Memo format
• The length of memo is within the assigned length
limits—2 pages.
• Students successfully use in-text citations to
indicate the data sources.
• The general format of memorandum is followed.
• A reference list is provided in a separate page. 2 20%
Score Total Points 10 100%
Example2ofwrittenmemo.pdf
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MEMORANDUM
Date: 10/01/2021
To: Tai Kuang-Ting, Professor
From: Elizabeth Warner, MPA Student
Subject: Social Equity – The Case for Affirmative Action – SFFA v. Harvard
Abstract. This document aims to inform about the right to equality which has positive but also
negative aspects. This case particularly concerns a lawsuit that claims that Harvard University is
discriminating against Asian-American applicants and whose main purpose is to find signs about
the future of programs designed to boost the presence of underrepresented groups on college
campuses in the United States.
Introduction. In November 2014, Students for Fair Admissions (SFFA) filed its lawsuit, alleging
that Harvard was employing racially and ethnically discriminatory policies and procedures when
administering the undergraduate admissions program that are biased against Asian-American
applicants. This lawsuit focuses primarily on whether Harvard violated the Civil Rights Act by
discriminating against Asian Americans and not directly on affirmative action. But with the case
almost guaranteed to be appealed to the Supreme Court, the questions it addresses could ultimately
affect how and if schools use processes like affirmative action to select students and ensure
diversity on campus but both parties argue that it could change this. Rather than a white plaintiff,
this case is based on a group of high-achieving Asian Americans who argue that a policy aimed at
helping students of color is actually hurting them.
After many years, finally in February 2020, SFFA filed an appeal with the United States Court
of Appeals for the First Circuit in which arguments were heard in mid-2020 and finally ruled in
late 2020 in favor of Harvard, concluding that Judge Burroughs was correct in her decision and
the main factual findings. As a result, SFFA recommended to "eliminate Affirmative Action" and
requested the following relief:
(1) a declaratory judgment that “any use of race or ethnicity in the educational setting violates the
Fourteenth Amendment and Title VI of the Civil Rights Acts of 1964,”
(2) a permanent injunction “prohibiting Harvard from using race as a factor in future
undergraduate admissions decisions,”
(3) a permanent injunction “requiring Harvard to conduct all admissions in a manner that does not
permit those engaged in the decisional process to be aware of or learn the race or ethnicity of
any applicant for admission.”
Main Discussion. Overall, affirmative actions inspired by the multicultural approach and
intercultural policies are not mutually exclusive. On the contrary, affirmative actions can
contribute to equity, dialogue, and coexistence between cultures in addition to complementing the
differentiated rights according to the group necessary to guarantee justice between them.
Furthermore, due to the limitations of resources or legitimacy, in some cases they are the only
possible alternatives.
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However, from an intercultural perspective, the efficacy of affirmative action is ambiguous
since there are coincidences between the two, as they seek to correct inequities between cultural
groups. Thus far, affirmative actions are necessary but not sufficient to achieve the ideals of
interculturality, respect, coexistence, dialogue, and mutual learning between cultural groups.
Consequently, a transition towards intercultural policies is required, which attack the
socioeconomic causes of inequality beyond its consequences because it is important that we not
only concern ourselves with repressing discrimination and facilitating the integration of cultural
groups into the dominant culture, but that we allow the development of their differences.
Additionally, in normative terms, let us go beyond tolerance and coexistence to achieve respect
and coexistence between cultures, that we involve different cultures in our design and
implementation in dialogic and participatory processes that work in the long term or permanently.
Policy Recommendations. I believe that intercultural policies are often confused with affirmative
actions of a multicultural nature; however, both approaches have different foundations and effects.
The main suggestion is that affirmative action allows achieving greater degrees of equity between
cultural groups, but it is insufficient to achieve the ideals of interculturality such as dialogue,
respect, coexistence, mutual learning between cultures, and the elimination of structural causes
that produce inequality between them, see related recommendations below:
(1) Encourage dialogue and participation – while affirmative action seek coexistence, intercultural
policies must bet on coexistence and dialogue between cultures.
(2) Bet on respect and coexistence, rather than coexistence and tolerance – Multiculturalism aims
to accommodate national and ethnic differences in a stable and morally defensible way. Thus
raised, multiculturalism is committed to tolerance and coexistence between cultures.
Tolerance implies “supporting what is different” (Tubino, 2003) – existence of the other, as
well as the dialogue and exchange between cultures, are not conceived as a good in themselves;
in some cases, they are understood as a lesser evil or in any case as something undesirable.
Consequently, cultures can coexist, but in isolation, without coexisting. Tolerance and
coexistence do not necessarily imply dialogue or exchange between cultures.
(3) Cultural domination – Affirmative action policies are based on the distinction between
minority and majority cultural groups. In which multiculturalism assumes that minority
cultural groups will always be subordinate in democratic regimes, where majorities decide.
Therefore, differentiated rights and affirmative actions are required for minority groups that
correct the inequalities faced by their individual members (e.g., quotas are required in political
and educational institutions focused on minority groups).
(4) Promote transformative actions and substantial equality – while affirmative action is aimed at
correcting the consequences of inequality between cultures (discrimination, exclusion), aiming
to improve equal opportunities, intercultural policies are committed to attacking the causes of
such inequality, advocating a substantial equality that implies structural transformations to
eliminate social and economic inequalities that impede an equitable dialogue between cultures.
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References
Collins, S. M. (2011). From affirmative action to diversity: Erasing inequality from
organizational responsibility. Critical Sociology, 37(5), 517-520.
Fleischacker, C. Argument on Behalf of Harvard in The Students for Fair Admissions (SFFA) v.
Harvard. Student Contributors, 112.
Ratanjee, T. (2020). Affirmative Action in College Admissions: Successes and
Failings. Bellarmine Law Society Review, 11(1).
Shafritz, J., Russell, E.W., Borick, C., & Hyde, A. (2017). Introducing Public Administration
(9th ed.). Routledge (pp. 401-403).
von Spakovsky, H. A. (2018). Racial Discrimination at Harvard University and America's" Elite"
Institutions. Legal Memorandum. No. 236. Heritage Foundation.
Example1ofwrittenmemo.pdf
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To: Kuang-Ting Tai
From: Carole Thomas
Date: September 11, 2021
Subject: Case analysis “Jack Welch of General Electric: A Neutron Bomb or a Motivator?”
Abstract
Jack Welch, CEO of General Electric, took bold action in his first five years with the company. The denouement
of 100,000 job cuts landed Welch in a spotlight some would consider the “hot seat,” but ultimately he was held in
the highest regard among his peers. He made sure the people running various segments of the business did so as if
they were entrepreneurs running their own business. The application of Welch’s methods could be considered
advantageous for public administration, specifically in the direction of public entrepreneurship. Encouraging
administrators to run the division or department as if it was their own business can lead to greater innovation,
reduced waste through collaboration across departments, reallocation of resources, greater efficiency among
departments, and a culture of pride. Giving employees psychological ownership includes them in the bigger picture.
Introduction
After cutting over 100,000 GE employees in a five-year span, Jack Welch, CEO of the organization from 1981 to
2001, became notorious for thinning the herd and running a refined organization (Gibson et al., 2012). Welch did
not arbitrarily begin handing out pink-slips; his deliberate end-goal was to empower those employees who remained
and create a winning culture of bold leaders who galvanized their business by motivating their people. For the
employees on the receiving end of displacement (and those who anticipated one), the anxiety grew exponentially
in this era of change. Nevertheless, Welch forged his path with a vision that this company would thrive in the face
of hardship, embrace change in a technology driven society, and empower the leaders of the business to enjoy the
experiences, rewards, and challenges associated with entrepreneurship. Welch accomplished his goals by removing
many levels of middle management and subsequently eliminating the bureaucratic red-tape that coincides. It may
seem crass to say Jack Welch "cut the fat," but just ask anyone who has lost a significant amount of weight...they
have more energy, are more productive, and they just feel better. Welch remained with GE for 20 years and has
been highly regarded as one of the most successful CEO's of his time.
Main Discussion
There is an inherent risk when a new leader seeks to "shake things up" by eliminating thousands of employees. If
there is merit to the statement “feelings are facts,” then fewer workers usually means that someone will have to pick
up the slack those who survive the cuts may feel like they are about to get the workload of three people (Shafritz et
al., 2017). Welch believed in concepts rarely seen in the public sector; he empowered his people with autonomy to
run their business as any entrepreneur. Entrepreneurs do not have the luxury of hiring multiple people to fill
specialized roles, they need one person to wear many hats. Moreover, the entrepreneurial spirit is settled in the
womb of the competitive spirit (another characteristic lacking in the public sector). The entrepreneurial
characteristics Welch spotlights include managing resources, working across division lines to find best practices,
and removing red-tape which dampens the decision-making process (Gibson et al., 2012).
Welch determined that each business segment that was not leading the market (or at the very least, second
in market share), was not worth keeping (Gibson et al., 2012). The pragmatic ability to make a totally data driven
decision is, in itself, an attribute admired by many ambitious leaders in the world, but for some, this cutthroat
lifestyle comes at a price. Welch kept leaders on board who were ambitious in their quest to lead the market, in
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perpetuity. This type of pressure can have consequences to one's health and mental wellbeing and is not necessarily
suited for everyone. While workers in the 1980’s may have acquiesced to such demands, studies suggest the
generations entering the workforce today, “Gen Z” is the most anxious and fragile of all prior generations (Wiest,
2019). It seems inconceivable that fragility would survive the wrath of Jack Welch. It is surprising, nevertheless,
that there aren't more Jack Welches in modern day leadership as more and more roles are filled through automation
and information technology, thus diminishing the relevance of middle management (Shafritz et al., 2017).
The decision to reduce workforce by 100,000 employees over a five-year period during the 1980’s, is a top-
down decision that was implemented with rapid-fire in an era before the concept of change management was
prominent. Although this level of dismissal in the public sector seems unlikely, a campaign promise made by, then
candidate, Bill Clinton in 1992 vowed to reduce the Federal Government by 100,000 employees within his first
year in office (Shafritz et al., 2017). In February of 1993, Clinton issued an executive order terminating 100,000
employees by the end of the 1995 fiscal year (Executive Order 12,839 1993). While it seems as if President Clinton
took a page from Welch’s leadership text, in September of 1994, Clinton signed a law to execute $8.8 billion in
grants for the purpose of hiring 100,000 law enforcement officers (Rector, 2000). Thus, the reallocation of resources
to meet varying demands may be more suitable in the public sector.
Policy Recommendations
One way to encourage an entrepreneurial spirit in the public sector, is by implementing "public entrepreneurship,”
a concept so called by Social Scientist, Elinor Ostrom, but rarely promulgated by elected officials (Conway, 2018).
This approach champions innovation, optimal use of resources, collaboration, and modernization of the
organizational hierarchy (Conway, 2018). One example is mindful deliberation of resource management, which
can be done by simply realigning priorities as President Bill Clinton did when he eliminated 100,000 bureaucratic
jobs and subsequently implemented steps toward the addition of 100,000 law enforcement positions.
Connection with This Course
If a no-nonsense guy like Jack Welch was an administrator or government official, he would most likely streamline
the workforce enforcing public entrepreneurship. He would hold those in charge, accountable for their failures and
honor those who met the challenge of “running their business.” He would likely think less about his popularity and
concern himself with the satisfaction of the people who work for him. He would ensure the most talented people
were compensated based on their level of performance and expertise. And if his municipality wasn’t a leader among
others, he would likely reallocate resources until he was number one among all similar jurisdictions.
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References
Conway, R. (2018, July 25). How to be a public entrepreneur. Retrieved September 09, 2021, from
https://www.thersa.org/blog/2018/07/how-to-be-a-public-entrepreneur
Exec. Order No. 12839, 3 C.F.R. 1 (1993).
Gibson, J. L., Konopaske, R., Ivancevich, J. M., & Donnelly, J. H., Jr. (2012). Case for Analysis: Jack Welch of
General Electric: A Neutron Bomb or a Motivator. In Organizations: Behavior, structure, processes (pp.
189-190). New York, NY: McGraw Hill.
Rector, R. (2000, September 25). The facts about cops: A performance overview of the Community Oriented
Policing Services Program. Retrieved September 09, 2021, from https://www.heritage.org/crime-and-
justice/report/the-facts-about-cops-performance-overview-the-community-oriented-policing
Shafritz, J. M., Russell, E. W., Borick, C. P., & Hyde, A. C. (2017). Introducing public administration (9th ed.).
Routledge.
Wiest, B. (2019, May 09). Experts say gen Z isn't prepared for the workplace, but it isn't all their fault. Retrieved
September 09, 2021, from https://www.forbes.com/sites/briannawiest/2019/02/13/experts-say-gen-z-isnt-
prepared-for-the-workplace-but-it-isnt-all-their-fault/?sh=4c16aaf5ae92