The Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy seeks to improve our increasingly urbanized and
interconnected world by exploring planning approaches and public policy
solutions that are healthier, greener, fairer, and generate greater
prosperity than do current practices. It pursues equitable and
efficient solutions to public problems at multiple levels from the
global to the local and emphasizes the professional perspectives of
urban planning, public policy, and public health. Within each of these
domains, the school advances its aspiration to be a global leader in
teaching, research, and service by engaging society's challenges with
focused programs that align current strengths with emerging needs. Its
mission includes:
- solving public problems through constructive engagement of governmental, private, and nonprofit actors;
- addressing the challenge of urbanization in its various global manifestations;
- serving New Jersey's need for a rigorous and engaging public policy forum; and
- preparing students for rewarding professional careers in public service.
Edward J. Bloustein--Rutgers president,
constitutional scholar, active citizen, philosopher, and teacher--lived
a life of civic engagement that the school's ethic seeks to perpetuate.
Research, teaching, and outreach at the Bloustein School aim for
intellectual originality and practical rigor in an atmosphere of
spirited and open debate. Bloustein activities are rooted in diversity
of experience and thought. They create settings where individuals and
communities can flourish. The Bloustein ethic strives to improve the
quality of public discourse by producing ideas and measures that have
impact.
The Bloustein ethic engages those who do their jobs not just
honorably, but with a passion for their work that alters their
surroundings. The Bloustein School seeks to foster new research and
thinking that achieve both scholarly recognition and public acceptance.