Project Groups

students in class

Public policy is the intervention in and the design of political reality. Therefore, having our students work with practical examples and professional partners and solve real-life problems is an important part of our teaching philosophy and prepares them for their future careers. They consult external clients on policy challenges in our project groups and gain experience through a mandatory internship.

During the third semester, all MPP students participate in a project group. Under the supervision of an academic staff member, a group of around ten students completes an assignment by an external partner ("client") on a real public policy problem or question. The objective of the project groups is that students can put their acquired knowledge into practice. Students work on a specific project task to gain experience in project planning and management and in organizing effective teamwork. The projects can range from drafting business cases for new policy initiatives to writing background reports on an important policy issue, or crafting scenarios for future or hard-to-measure policy options. The project group is worth 9 credit points (ECTS) – i.e., a workload of approximately 270 hours over the course of six months (October to March).

Throughout the project students engage with the external ‘clients’ in an entrepreneurial and professional way. The clients help defining the final deliverable of the project and the students plan the implementation. Occasional meetings between students and clients might take place to define the main motivation, score, terms of reference, and milestones of the project. The clients usually host the student group for a physical presentation of the final project at the host institution (capacity constraints and the pandemic situation permitting). Past clients include development agencies such as the German Agency for International Cooperation (GIZ), climate consultancies such as adelphi, nonpartisan and charitable organizations such as the Aspen Institute, or philanthropies such as the Open Society Foundations.

Project Group examples

Project Group in Vienna
Project "Green Horizon Fund for Ukraine (GHF4U)" Read more
Dr. Alejandra Ortiz- Head of the Conflict Specialization; Matthew Ragget- Director of Thuringia International School and Nancy Apraez – Member of the Project
Project “Everyday Practical Peacebuilding” Read more
students at adelphi
Critical minerals: Options for diversifying German raw material supplies Read more
students at the State of Thuringia
Digitalization Strategy Recommendations for the State of Thuringia Read more
group picture
Incentivizing Social Entrepreneurship Read more
group picture
State Armed Actors and Transitional Justice Read more
GACC group picute
Global Anti-Corruption Campaign (GACC) Read more

Former project groups

wind mill
2020-2021

Prospects for green hydrogen. How climate diplomacy can support German and global energy transition

Partner: Adelphi („a leading independent think tank and public policy consultancy on climate, environment and development“)
Output: Zable, A., Nunez, A., Kumar, A., Martins, B., Rayo,E., Kilpp, G., Raasch, G., Maximova, L., Abubakari, L., & Koto, N. (2021, June 16). Beyond Sahara, green hydrogen transition could lead to unexpected partners for Germany. Climate-Diplomacy Magazine

globe
2019-2020

Eine Welt Netzwerk Thüringen – Sustainability Definitions

Partner: Eine Welt Netzwerk Thüringen (EWNT) ("Engagement Global” and “Nord-Süd-Brücke”, the “One World Network”)
 

migrants
2019-2020

Assessing Policy Alternatives to the Incumbent EU Migration Regime

Partner: Open Society Initiative for Europe (OSIFE)
 

project group
2018-2019

Peace and Policy: Innovations in Peace Missions

Partner: Zentrum für internationale Friedenseinsätze/ Center for International Peace Operations (ZIF) in Berlin

project group
2019-2020

Conflict and Cooperation in the Indo-Pacific Region

Partner: Aspen Institute in Berlin
Output: Willy Brandt School of Public Policy. (2020). Report to the Aspen Institute on the future of work

urban
2018-2019

Community and Urban Development

Partner: NGO Oikodrom, the Vienna Institute for Urban Sustainability and the communications agency Oikoplus

taxes
2018-2019

Harmful Tax Practices, Tax Avoidance and Tax Administration in Developing Countries

Partner: Tax Justice Network
Output: Bajrovic,A., Cook,B., Levario, E., Ens, K., Brackin, M., Geusser, M., & Leon Ibarra, R. (2019). How to Fight Excessive Tax Competition and Harmful Practices – The Case of Ecuador. Working paper World Economy,Ecology and Development (WEED), 30.04.2019 

euro sign
2017-2018

Shaping EU Policy-Making: ECIPE Consulting Project on the Sharing Economy and the Future of Work

Partner: European Centre for International Political Economy

Project Groups

MPP Program and Student Inquiries
(Willy Brandt School of Public Policy)
C19 - Research Building "Weltbeziehungen" / C19.02.40

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