Calendar 2021
  • Athabasca University
  • Calendar 2021
  • Undergraduate Calendar
  • Program regulations
  • Degrees
  • Bachelor of Arts, Minor in Public Administration

Bachelor of Arts, Minor in Public Administration

Regulations amended, effective September 1, 2021.

The Public Administration minor is designed for students who are seeking managerial careers at the municipal, provincial, and federal levels of government, as well as within non-profit and quasi-governmental organizations. Students can select a mix of Arts and Applied Studies courses in such areas as governance, political science, public policy, economics, public finance, budgeting, legal studies, human resources management, industrial relations, communications, health administration, and indigenous studies.

The role of public servants is becoming increasingly complex as the global economy becomes more integrated and the capacity of nation-states to act decisively is constrained by a multitude of factors. Public Administration professionals must possess strategic, analytic, and creative thinking skills. This minor prepares students to assume public sector managerial roles in the knowledge-based society; it provides them with exposure to administrative concepts, tools and practice, yet keeps them firmly grounded in the liberal arts education program.


Public Administration Minor (optional) - 30 credits

Required courses

(24 credits)

GOVN 301 Governance, the Public Sector and Corporate Power (3)
GOVN 380/HSRV 363 or
GOVN/POLI 405 or
GOVN 450
Nonprofit and Voluntary Sector Governance or
Innovative Public Management or
Public Budgeting and Financial Management in a Globalized World
(3)
GOVN/LGST 377 or
GLST/GOVN/POLI 440 or
LGST 331* or
INST 426*
Issues in Access to Information and Privacy Protection or
Global Governance and Law or
Administrative Law or
Aboriginal Law and Government
(3)
A Policy course, such as:
GOVN 390/POLI 392 or
GOVN/POLI/GLST 403
Public Policy and Administrative Governance or
Public Policy in a Global Area
(3)
A Statistics course, such as:
CMNS 308 or
SOCI 301
Understanding Statistical Evidence or
Social Statistics
(3)
A Professional Ethics course, such as:
PHIL 333 Professional Ethics** or
Other PHIL professional ethics course
(3)
Indigenous cultural competency course, such as:
INST 203 or
INST 205 or
POLI 311 or
ANTH 362
Indigenous Studies I or
Indigenous Studies II or
Aboriginal Politics and Governments or
First Peoples of Canada
(3)
Women-focused of gender studies course, such as:
 
ANTH 375 or
HSRV 421 or
POLI 350 or
LGST 390
All WGST courses or
The Anthropology of Gender or
Advocacy from the Margins or
Women in Canadian Politics or
Women, Equality, and the Law *
(3)

Electives

(6 credits)

GOVN All GOVN courses that are not required courses  
GLST 205 Building Blocks of Global Studies: Overview of Approaches, Concepts, and Issues (3)
GLST/ENVS 243 Environmental Change in a Global Context (3)
ENVS 305 Environmental Impact Assessment (3)
ENVS 435 Transformative Change in Building Sustainable Communities (3)
ECON 247 or
ECON 248
Microeconomics or
Macroeconomics
(3)
ADMN 232* or
SOCI 300 or
ORGB 326* or
ORGB 364*
Introduction to Management or
How Humans Organize: From Primary Groups to the World Wide Web or
Organizational Theory or
Organizational Behavior
(3)
SOCI 381 The Rich and the Rest: The Sociology of Wealth, Power, and Inequality (3)
IDRL* All IDRL courses
HRMT* All HRMT courses
LBST All LBST courses
POEC All POEC courses
POLI All POLI courses

Notes:

All courses above are designated Social Science, unless otherwise indicated by asterisks.

*Applied Studies courses. Note that students are only allowed to take 18 credits of Applied Studies towards an Arts degree.

**Humanities.


Language proficiency

Students who wish to pursue employment in the federal civil service or foreign affairs are strongly encouraged to take French for their Option courses. Students interested in North American integration should take Spanish. Students interested in governance capacity building for First Nations communities should consider taking an Indigenous language course.

Information effective Sept. 1, 2021 to Aug. 31, 2022.

Updated May 09, 2025 by Office of the Registrar (calendar@athabascau.ca)

https://www.athabascau.ca/calendar/2021/ 68c11c2e0a2a51fa5b33dd6f1464dd7b