Your policy brief can be addressed to a non-governmental organization (e.g. Amnesty International), a government (e.g. the president of the U.S.A. or any other country), or an inter/supra-governmental organization (e.g. the UN Security Council or the European Parliament).
III. Once you have selected your topic and your perspective, you will need to do extensive research. Your research should draw from books, scholarly journals, and other sources (including, but not limited to, news sources and international think tanks).
Use databases available through the Santa Fe College Library website like JStor and Academic Search Complete – specifically you will be looking at political science and history journals. Please confirm that the journals you are using are peer-reviewed.
Use widely recognized news sources:
General News Sources: The New York Times, Washington Post, Aljazeera, BBC,
Specialty News Sources: Foreign Affairs, Atlantic Monthly, Foreign Policy
If you have any doubts about the legitimacy of your source contact me.
Use think tank sites like the Council on Foreign Relations, The Foreign Policy Research Institute, or The Institute for Foreign Policy Analysis.
Use government or organizational websites like the US State Department or the United Nations.
IV. Your paper should be organized in the following way:
The first page should be a title page. This page should include your name, your student ID, the name and section number of this class, the date, and an executive summery. An executive summary is a one paragraph, single-spaced summation of your essay. It should also include the name of the organization or individual you are briefing. This does not count toward your page total.
The body of your brief should include the following
A statement of the issue/problem you are addressing.
Background of the problem or issue: Include only the essential facts. Assume that you have been hired as an expert to filter through the research on the behalf of another. Be clear and succinct.
Explain your organization’s interest in the issue: what is at stake? How specifically does this organization have the capacity to help?
Explain the current policy that your organization has adopted toward this issue. Why is it inadequate? (If this organization has not addressed the issue yet, this is a policy-orientation).
Provide a recommendation for future action. This may mean weighing the costs and benefits of multiple options before coming down on the side of your recommendation. You should be working within the realm of reality. Utopian solutions will not fly. Be a draft horse not a Pegasus. Because you are attempting to formulate viable solutions to real world problems provide a timeline for implementation and outline benchmarks for success.
Any graphs, charts, or images that you use should be included in an appendix. They do not count toward your page total but are necessary if you seek an A on this paper. Images used should contribute to your argument.
Your bibliography should be provided at the very end.
Formatting:
The body of your brief should have one-inch margins on all sides. You should use 12 pt. Times New Roman font. It should be double-spaced. Page numbers should be included in the lower right side of the footer.
MLA citations are required. You must use in-text citations. Be consistent and cite ALL of your sources. If you had to look up the information (i.e. it was not your idea) then it must be cited.You may consult the OWL Purdue Writing Lab MLA guide (Links to an external site.)Links to an external site.for all your citation needs.
Grading Rubric
Quality and use of research: Did you use enough resources? Did you use proper resources? Did you correctly cite your resources?
Understanding of the problem: Have you displayed a thorough understanding of the topic? Have you shown overt bias or have you tried to include multiple perspectives?
Comprehensiveness of solution: Is the solution you propose within the policy purview of your organization? Does your organization have the resources or will to pursue this policy? Does your solution actually address the problem as you have defined it? Is your recommendation persuasive?
Formatting: Have you used correct formatting for your paper and your citations?
Style: Is your writing clear and concise? Is there unnecessary padding? Are you using words correctly? Does your brief unfold logically? Are you using professionally appropriat