From Prof. Alma Blount, for the Hart Leadership Program:
...think of public policy as
“…an agreement (formal or informal) on how an institution,
governing body or community will address shared problems or attain
shared goals.” Makani Themba, Making
Policy, Making Change: How Communities
Are Taking Law Into Their Own Hands.
A policy memo is not:
1.
Overview—beginning of the memo. (But you write it at the end of the
process. It is the executive summary of
what is most important in the entire memo.)
2.
Problem
statement
3.
Criteria—measurable things that you will examine to see if the
problem is resolved.
4.
Options/alternatives for addressing the problem, with a brief
analysis of each option.
5.
Recommendation—what needs to happen in order to make progress on the
problem you have identified?