What Public Policy Can Learn from Beyoncé: Lessons in Leadership, Equity, and Advocacy

How a Harvard Kennedy School course uses Cowboy Carter to expose the gap between policy intent and real-world delivery for MPA and MPP students.

By Holly AbramsonReviewed by PAP Editoral TeamUpdated June 8, 202624 min read

What you’ll learn in this article…

  • Harvard Kennedy School adjunct lecturer Ayushi Roy uses Beyoncé's 'Cowboy Carter' album to teach the gap between policy intent and delivery.
  • Students in the course built a child reunification simulation program for California's child welfare system using real operational data.
  • Roy argues that MPA and MPP curricula over-emphasize policy design while under-investing in implementation, political feasibility, and user experience.
  • Aggregated data often masks disparities in program access, making user-centered design essential for effective public policy advocacy.

Public policy education sits between two competing pressures: the analytical rigor that produces clean program designs, and the messy operational reality that determines whether Medicaid renewals actually reach eligible families or SNAP benefits clear before rent is due. A Harvard Kennedy School course is using an unlikely text to examine that gap.

"American Requiem: Beyoncé, Benefits and the Gap Between Promise and Delivery," taught by adjunct lecturer Ayushi Roy, uses the 2024 album "Cowboy Carter" as a framework for examining importance of public policy implementation. Roy, who brings more than a dozen years of government service to the classroom, draws a direct parallel between the historical erasure of Black artists from country music and the routine overlooking of marginalized perspectives in safety net programs.

The course offers MPA and MPP students concrete lessons in implementation, equity, user-centered design, and the storytelling tactics that move policy from statute to street level.

Inside the Harvard Course Connecting Beyoncé to Public Policy

What does a Harvard Kennedy School course on Beyoncé actually teach future policymakers?

The answer is more rigorous than the headline suggests. Ayushi Roy, an adjunct lecturer in public policy at Harvard Kennedy School, designed a graduate elective that uses popular culture as a precision instrument for examining why government programs fail the people they are meant to serve.1 The course, officially titled "Enabling Digital Delivery: Benefits Implementation in Beyoncé's America" (SUP-112M), is listed in the Kennedy School catalog as a graduate elective that builds on a prerequisite in digital government.2 Roy brings more than a dozen years of practitioner experience to the classroom, having previously served as Director of State and Local Technology at 18F, the federal digital services agency housed within the General Services Administration. She currently holds the position of Deputy Director at the New Practice Lab at New America, founded the civic engagement organization We Who Engage, and serves as a faculty affiliate at the Shorenstein Center on Media, Politics and Public Policy.3 She completed her graduate work at Columbia University.

The Cowboy Carter Framework

The course is sometimes referenced thematically as "American Requiem," a label drawn from the album itself.4 Roy chose Beyoncé's 2024 release "Cowboy Carter" not as a novelty device but as a conceptual lens with genuine analytical weight. The album confronts the deliberate erasure of Black artists from country music, a genre they helped shape. Roy draws a direct parallel to the way government safety-net programs, including Medicaid and SNAP, routinely overlook or obscure the distinct experiences of marginalized communities. Just as the music industry aggregated "country" in ways that erased specific voices, policy systems aggregate data in ways that smooth over the populations most in need of tailored support.

Teaching Methods and Course Goals

The course relies on case studies, practitioner guest speakers, and what Roy describes as lived-experience grounding. Students engage with real implementation problems rather than abstract policy models. According to coverage in the Harvard Gazette, the goal is to train the next generation of policymakers to think more expansively about what defines good policy. That definition, Roy argues, must extend beyond legislative intent or program enrollment numbers to include the friction points where delivery breaks down.

The course structure reflects Roy's conviction, shaped by her government career, that the hardest part of public service is not building a solution but navigating the political and operational conditions that determine whether a solution ever reaches the people it was designed for. For MPA and MPP students considering careers in public policy, benefits administration, or social policy, this course offers a rare practitioner-led model of how implementation literacy gets built.

The Gap Between Policy Promise and Delivery

The policy implementation gap describes the distance between what legislation promises on paper and what beneficiaries actually receive in practice. Ayushi Roy frames this gap as the central challenge in public administration: laws create entitlements, but operational realities determine whether people can access them.1 For professionals entering public policy and administration careers, understanding this gap is not academic. It shapes whether safety net programs fulfill their mission or exclude the people they were designed to help.

Medicaid and SNAP: Where Promise Meets Friction

Roy uses Medicaid and SNAP (Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program) as illustrative examples. Both programs serve millions of low-income Americans, but enrollment barriers and administrative burden create friction at every touchpoint. Applicants face confusing forms, inconsistent caseworker guidance, digital systems that time out or reject valid documentation, and recertification processes that demand repeated proof of eligibility. These operational hurdles disproportionately affect the same populations the programs aim to serve: working parents juggling multiple jobs, individuals without reliable internet access, and families navigating systems in languages other than English.

Aggregated data masks these breakdowns. Policy evaluations often report total enrollment figures or average benefits disbursed, metrics that suggest the programs are functioning. But those numbers hide who falls through the cracks: the single mother who loses coverage during a recertification gap, the immigrant family that abandons the application after three failed attempts, the rural household that cannot reach a caseworker by phone. When policymakers rely solely on aggregate statistics, they miss the operational friction where equity breaks down.1

The Cultural Parallel: Erasure in Country Music and in Policy Systems

Roy draws an explicit parallel between the erasure of Black artists from country music history and the overlooking of marginalized voices in policy design.1 Just as country music institutions credited white performers for innovations rooted in Black musical traditions, policy systems often sideline the lived experiences of the communities they serve. Programs are designed by analysts reviewing data sets, not by engaging the people who will navigate enrollment portals or wait in benefits offices. The result is policy that looks equitable in theory but perpetuates exclusion in practice. Understanding the full scope of public policy making helps illuminate why these design failures persist across generations of reform.

Good Policy on Paper Does Not Equal Good Policy in Practice

This framework offers a concrete mental model for students and professionals: legislation is only the starting point. Operational implementation determines whether a policy advances equity or reinforces existing gaps. Administrative burden is not a technical detail. It is a design choice that shapes who can access benefits, how quickly, and at what personal cost. For MPA and MPP practitioners, the lesson is clear: if you ignore the gap between promise and delivery, you risk building systems that serve data dashboards more effectively than they serve people.

Questions to Ask Yourself

Concentrating solely on design leaves critical delivery gaps unchecked. Studying frictions like bureaucratic hurdles or political resistance surfaces the real-world obstacles that determine whether a policy works.

Complex paperwork, unclear language, and digital divides often exclude the very people a program aims to serve. Mapping the user journey reveals administrative burdens that undercut equitable access.

Large datasets can hide minority, rural, or transient populations whose outcomes differ sharply from the mean. Questioning data sources pushes you to seek granular, narrative-rich evidence that drives inclusive policy.

Why Implementation Matters More Than Technology

Graduate programs in public policy and public administration have long emphasized the analytical side of the discipline: students learn to model outcomes, evaluate interventions, and design elegant solutions on paper. Yet as Ayushi Roy argues in her Harvard Kennedy School course, building technology is the easy part. Managing political feasibility and implementation is where policy lives or dies.

What Political Feasibility Means in Practice

Political feasibility is not an abstract concept. For MPA and MPP students entering government service, it means navigating stakeholder buy-in across multiple agencies, each with its own mandates and internal politics. It means securing funding streams that survive budget cycles and leadership transitions. It means understanding the capacity constraints of the agencies tasked with execution, from hiring freezes to outdated IT infrastructure. It means coordinating across levels of government when a federal program depends on state and local implementation. Without these operational realities in focus, even well-designed policies collapse under their own weight.

When Technology Stumbles on Implementation

Recent history offers stark examples. The 2013 launch of Healthcare.gov became a national embarrassment not because the policy was flawed, but because the procurement process, inter-agency coordination, and testing timeline were mismanaged. During the COVID-19 pandemic, state unemployment systems built on decades-old COBOL code buckled under surge demand, leaving millions of Americans unable to access benefits they were legally entitled to receive. In both cases, the policy intent was sound. The failure was operational.

These breakdowns underscore a structural gap in how public policy education prepares practitioners. MPP programs nationally emphasize research methods, statistics, and policy analysis.1 MPA programs formally recognize implementation as a distinct domain, with NASPAA standards noting that MPA curricula develop the skills used by managers to implement policies, projects, and programs.2 Yet no separate implementation competency category exists within NASPAA's core clusters as of 2026, and no major standards overhaul has tightened implementation requirements in recent years.2 Understanding the difference between public administration and public policy helps clarify why these curricular gaps persist.

Curriculum and Career Skills

Some programs have responded. Southern Methodist University offers a dedicated Policy Implementation and Evaluation course within its MPP.3 American University's MPA emphasizes work products like implementation plans alongside decision memos and bill analyses.1 Northeastern University integrates co-ops, internships, and capstones that expose students to operational challenges in real time.4

But a recent study on alignment between MPA and MPP curricula and civil service requirements found that engagement between graduate programs and government hiring agencies remains informal, often mediated through intermediary bodies rather than direct collaboration.5 The skills civil servants need most are translating policy into operational rules, managing inter-organizational coordination, navigating frontline discretion, and balancing political and bureaucratic pressures.5

Actionable Takeaway

For students, the lesson is clear: supplement your quantitative training with change management, stakeholder mapping, and operational planning. Seek out practicums, capstones, and co-ops that place you inside implementation challenges, not just research projects. The data science skills are valuable. But the ability to shepherd a policy from statute to service delivery is what separates policy analysts from leaders.

Policy Design vs. Policy Implementation: What MPA/MPP Programs Emphasize

Ayushi Roy, an adjunct lecturer at Harvard Kennedy School with over a dozen years of government service, argues that MPA and MPP curricula over-index on policy design while under-investing in the operational realities of implementation. This comparison highlights the gap Roy wants programs to close, reinforcing that building technology or drafting policy is the easy part: managing political feasibility and delivery is the hard part.

Comparison of policy design versus implementation skills in MPA and MPP curricula, showing most programs emphasize design over operational delivery

User-Centered Design and the Limits of Aggregated Data

Aggregated state-level Medicaid enrollment figures can show 95 percent participation among eligible residents while obscuring the reality that certain rural counties have virtually no participating providers within a 50-mile radius. This disconnect between statistical success and lived experience sits at the heart of what Ayushi Roy identifies as a fundamental flaw in how policymakers interpret program performance. When data gets averaged across populations, it often fails to capture the commonplace and distinct experiences of the American public, particularly those facing compounding barriers like language access, transportation limitations, or documentation requirements.1

What User-Centered Design Means in Policy

User-centered design in a policy context means structuring programs around the actual journeys of beneficiaries rather than demographic averages or administrative convenience. This approach requires policymakers to map how a working parent with limited English proficiency actually navigates SNAP enrollment, not how an idealized applicant moves through the system on paper. The gap between these two realities often explains why technically sound policies fail to reach their intended populations.

For public administration practitioners, this translates to asking different questions during program development:

  • Journey mapping: What does a beneficiary's complete experience look like from awareness to enrollment to ongoing compliance?
  • Barrier identification: Where do people fall out of the process, and why?
  • Feedback loops: How does the agency learn when the system is not working for specific populations?

The Equity Connection

Roy draws a direct parallel between the erasure of Black artists from country music history and the overlooking of marginalized perspectives in government safety net programs.1 Both represent institutional blind spots, places where the dominant narrative excludes voices that do not fit neatly into existing categories. In policy terms, this erasure happens when policymakers rely exclusively on aggregated data that smooths over the experiences of smaller or harder-to-reach populations.

Disaggregated data and qualitative user research function as correctives to this erasure. Breaking down enrollment figures by county, language preference, or household composition reveals which communities benefit from a program and which do not. Pairing that quantitative disaggregation with direct interviews and focus groups surfaces the reasons behind disparities in ways that spreadsheets cannot.

Building These Skills as an MPA/MPP Student

Students preparing for public administration careers can develop user-centered research competencies through deliberate practice:

  • Conduct user interviews: Learn to ask open-ended questions that reveal how beneficiaries experience government programs, not just whether they enrolled.
  • Map beneficiary journeys: Create visual representations of the steps, decisions, and obstacles people encounter when accessing services.
  • Question whose story the data tells: Whenever reviewing program metrics, ask which populations are included in the average and whose experiences might be hidden beneath aggregate figures.

These skills complement technical policy analysis by ensuring that proposed solutions address actual implementation challenges rather than idealized versions of how programs should work.

How Pop Culture Can Strengthen Public Policy Storytelling

Pop culture is not just entertainment. It is an increasingly recognized tool for making public policy vivid, relatable, and actionable. From classroom exercises that dissect the storytelling techniques of blockbuster films to mass-media campaigns that recruit celebrities to boost civic participation, cultural references can bridge the gap between abstract policy analysis and the lived experience of communities, especially those whose perspectives are often marginalized in traditional policy discourse.

Pop Culture in the Classroom

A small but growing number of public policy programs are weaving music, film, and television into their curricula. These courses often ask students to analyze how narrative structures, character arcs, and emotional engagement can illuminate complex policy challenges. For example, an instructor might use a documentary to explore housing inequality, or assign a popular TV episode that satirizes bureaucratic dysfunction as a springboard for discussing administrative reform. The goal is not simply to entertain, but to teach future policymakers how to communicate with audiences who may never read a policy brief. Syllabi that integrate pop culture tend to emphasize skills such as audience analysis, framing, and persuasive storytelling, competencies that are rarely taught in traditional quantitative-heavy MPA or MPP programs but are increasingly valued in advocacy and public engagement roles. For students still exploring what is public policy and how it shapes everyday life, these courses offer an accessible entry point.

Outreach Campaigns with Cultural Reach

Organizations that aim to shift public behavior have long understood the power of cultural figures. The Ad Council, Rock the Vote, and similar groups frequently partner with musicians, actors, and digital creators to amplify messages around voter registration, public health, and social equity. These campaigns often generate higher recall and shareability than standard public service announcements. When a celebrity addresses a policy issue, whether it is a pop star discussing maternal health disparities or a fictional character promoting census participation, the message can cut through information clutter and reach demographics that are otherwise disconnected from formal policy communication. For public administration students, studying these campaigns offers insight into audience segmentation, message design, and the measurement of real-world outcomes such as increased enrollment in safety net programs or higher turnout in local elections.

Academic and Think-Tank Frameworks

The scholarly and professional literature on entertainment-education and popular culture policy framing has grown steadily. Researchers at think tanks and universities have explored how narrative formats can reduce partisan resistance by embedding policy arguments within compelling stories. Those considering a career path as a think tank analyst will find this intersection of cultural analysis and policy research especially relevant. This body of work suggests that pop culture can serve as a bridging mechanism, helping policy advocates build coalitions around values like fairness, opportunity, and community, values that are embedded in many cultural products. While rigorous quantitative studies remain limited, qualitative analyses and case studies consistently point to the potential of cultural references to make policy debates more accessible and less technocratic.

Practical Steps for MPA/MPP Students

For those looking to deepen their own skill set, several low-risk exploratory activities are available. Review publicly posted course descriptions from policy schools to identify offerings with titles like "Narrative and Policy" or "Media and Public Affairs." Examine the campaign archives of advocacy groups for documented frameworks that tie celebrity engagement to specific policy actions. And explore professional development modules from associations such as the American Political Science Association, which occasionally feature resources on using storytelling and media in policy education. While formal templates are scarce, the growing intersection of pop culture and public policy offers a rich field for applied learning and innovation.

Real-World Case Study: Child Welfare Simulation in California

The most consequential classroom projects in public policy don't just analyze problems; they build tools that agencies can actually use.

A Simulation Built on Real Data

California's child welfare system is a high-stakes environment. In 2024, an estimated 38,490 children were in foster care, with 17,336 new entries that year alone.1 Reunification, the goal for most families, succeeds in only 45 to 50% of cases, and the median time to achieve it ranges from 12 to 18 months.2 Behind these numbers lie persistent challenges: caseworkers juggle oversized caseloads, placement instability disrupts progress, and youth who age out face alarming outcomes, including a 31% homelessness rate during the transition to adulthood.3 These are not just statistics; they represent the operational friction that daily undermines policy intent.

How the Project Worked

Students in the Harvard Kennedy School course "Ameriican Requiem: Beyoncé, Benefits and the Gap Between Promise and Delivery" partnered directly with a former California secretary of health and human services. The result was a child reunification simulation program, a dynamic modeling tool that lets policymakers test how changes to processes, resources, or timelines might alter outcomes. By adjusting parameters such as caseworker availability, court hearing delays, or access to substance abuse treatment, users can visualize the ripple effects on reunification rates and timelines. The simulation doesn't predict the future; it reveals bottlenecks and trade-offs that are otherwise invisible in static reports.

Why This Matters for Policy Education

The project exemplifies the kind of capstone experience that MPA and MPP programs should prioritize but often lack. Too many graduate projects remain theoretical, producing white papers or research analyses that never touch a real agency. This simulation, in contrast, directly addressed an implementation gap: how to move from policy design to on-the-ground delivery. It required students to grapple with political feasibility, data limitations, and the lived realities of families navigating the system. Students pursuing a health policy masters will find this model especially relevant, given that child welfare intersects deeply with Medicaid and behavioral health systems. For a field that urgently needs practitioners skilled in execution, not just analysis, this model of applied, agency-partnered coursework sets a new standard.

Career Takeaways for Aspiring Public Administration and Policy Professionals

Public administration and policy is undergoing a structural shift: employers increasingly want professionals who can move fluidly between data analysis, operational management, and public communication. That demand has direct implications for how students should approach their education and early career choices.

Build Implementation Experience Early

The Harvard Kennedy School course discussed throughout this article makes a pointed argument: knowing how to design a policy is not the same as knowing how to deliver it. For students entering the field, this means seeking out practicums, fellowships, or entry-level roles that place you inside a government agency or nonprofit during actual program rollout, not just the planning phase. Watching a Medicaid enrollment process break down in real time teaches things a policy memo never will.

Implementation experience is increasingly what separates candidates at the mid-career stage, when positions shift from analysis and recommendation to leading cross-agency coordination and managing political stakeholders.

Five Skills That Will Define Your Career Arc

  • Implementation fluency: Understand procurement cycles, agency workflows, and the friction points between policy design and front-line delivery.
  • User-centered thinking: Know how to ask who the actual beneficiary is, what barriers they face, and whether program design reflects their reality.
  • Storytelling and advocacy: The ability to translate complex policy into compelling narratives opens doors in government, nonprofits, philanthropy, and the private sector.
  • Political feasibility analysis: A technically sound policy that cannot survive a budget negotiation or a legislative committee is not a finished policy. Treat political mapping as a core skill, not an afterthought.
  • Analytical rigor: Quantitative and qualitative research skills remain the foundation. The point is not to replace them but to pair them with operational and communication competencies.

Career Progression in Public Administration and Policy

A realistic progression looks like this: entry-level roles in government agencies, city offices, or mission-driven nonprofits provide operational grounding. Mid-career positions in program management or policy implementation leadership reward people who understand both the numbers and the human systems behind them. Senior advisory and cross-sector roles, including positions in consulting, philanthropy, or executive government, go to professionals who can synthesize all of it and communicate it clearly to non-expert audiences. For a broader overview of these trajectories, explore careers in public administration.

Masters in public policy and administration programs are responding to this reality. Admissions committees and hiring managers alike are placing more value on candidates who demonstrate real-world operational thinking alongside academic preparation.

A Note on Celebrity and the MPA

A common question surfaces occasionally: what public figures or celebrities hold an MPA degree? The honest answer is that very few do. The MPA attracts people drawn to governance, service delivery, and systemic change, not typically a pipeline associated with entertainment careers. The more interesting observation is the reverse: artists like Beyoncé are being studied in graduate policy classrooms precisely because public engagement, narrative, and cultural fluency are now recognized as legitimate tools of policy work. If you are weighing whether to pursue this path, understanding how to become a public administrator can help ground your decision. You do not need a celebrity to validate the field. You need practitioners who understand that the next generation of public servants must think like both rigorous analysts and effective storytellers.

Common Questions About Public Policy Advocacy and MPA/MPP Careers

Whether you are considering an MPA or MPP program or already working in public service, these questions address some of the most common themes raised throughout this article, from the role of advocacy and storytelling to the practical challenges of turning policy ideas into real outcomes.

Public policy advocacy is the process of researching, communicating, and mobilizing support to influence government decisions and resource allocation. Advocates work to shape legislation, regulations, and program design by amplifying the needs of affected communities. Effective advocacy combines rigorous analysis with compelling storytelling, translating lived experiences into actionable policy proposals that decision makers can act on.

Pop culture provides a shared language that makes complex policy issues accessible. As Ayushi Roy's Harvard Kennedy School course demonstrates, Beyoncé's 'Cowboy Carter' album offers a framework for examining how marginalized perspectives get overlooked in government programs like Medicaid and SNAP. Cultural narratives can reframe public debate, build empathy, and draw attention to systemic gaps that traditional policy briefs may struggle to communicate.

The gap describes the disconnect between what a policy is designed to accomplish and what beneficiaries actually experience. Even well-intentioned safety net programs can fail when implementation ignores operational frictions, political feasibility, or the distinct needs of diverse populations. Roy's course highlights this divide, showing students that the hardest work happens after legislation passes, during rollout, enrollment, and day-to-day administration.

Too many graduate programs focus on policy design and analysis without dedicating sufficient attention to how programs are actually delivered. Roy, drawing on over a dozen years of government service, argues that building technology is the easy part. Managing political feasibility, interagency coordination, and frontline execution is where policies succeed or fail. Stronger implementation curricula prepare graduates for the realities of public service careers.

User-centered design places the experiences of beneficiaries at the core of program development. As discussed earlier in this article, aggregated data often fails to capture the commonplace and distinct experiences of the American public. By engaging directly with the people a program serves, policymakers can identify barriers to access, simplify enrollment processes, and build more equitable systems, as Roy's students did with their child reunification simulation for California's child welfare system.

There is no widely verified list of celebrities holding an MPA degree. Public figures occasionally pursue graduate studies in public administration or policy, but confirmed examples are rare and not well documented. If you encounter claims online, verify them through university records or credible news sources. The value of an MPA or MPP is best measured by its impact on public service careers, not celebrity endorsements.

Start by building both analytical and communication skills during your MPA or MPP program. Seek internships or fellowships with agencies, nonprofits, or legislative offices where you can observe implementation challenges firsthand. Develop expertise in a specific policy area, then use storytelling, coalition building, and data to advocate for change. Professionals who bridge advocacy and policy are well positioned to drive meaningful, lasting improvements in public service delivery.

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