The Edward J.
Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy was established in 1992
to provide a focus for all of Rutgers` programs of instruction,
research, and service in planning and public policy. Since its
inception, the Bloustein School has emerged as one of the nation`s key
centers for the theory and practice of planning and public policy
scholarship and analysis. Edward J. Bloustein-Rutgers` former
president, constitutional scholar, active citizen, philosopher, and
teacher-lived a life of civic engagement that the school seeks to
perpetuate through the contributions of its faculty, staff, and
students.
The Bloustein School educates a highly select pool
of students, preparing them for both public and private sector careers,
teaching and research professions, and service at all levels of
government. Students are trained and ultimately employed in the areas
of land use, political processes, public health, employment and social
policy, human services, transportation policy and planning, housing and
real estate, urban redevelopment, regional development, and planning.
The Bloustein School is one of the few strong policy schools with the
capacity to address local, state, regional, national, and international
policy and planning issues with expertise and credibility. The school
is a leader in such areas as smart growth, transportation planning,
workforce development, and environmental health, and builds on its
association with research centers in related areas. The school is also
distinctive in its simultaneous focus on graduate and undergraduate
education.