The major at Virginia Tech is actually called Humanities for Public Service. The website is here (https://liberalarts.vt.edu/academics/majors-and-minors/humanities-for-public-service-major.html) and the required coursework is here (https://www.registrar.vt.edu/content/dam/registrar_vt_edu/documents/Updates/lahs/2022/lahs_barlc_hps_22.pdf).
From the website, it appears that this major is housed in the Department of Religion and Culture, and it takes the lens of academic religion in its approach: students take 7 courses in religion and culture and an additional 7 courses in other areas of the humanities and social sciences, with classes drawn from religion, political science, Appalachian studies (because of VT’s location), and history among other disciplines/fields. Only two of the courses possible for the major touch on policy, and both are completely optional.
This approach seems quite different from a traditional public policy major. That said, though, I’d also argue that a student who is interested in this major, but didn’t want to go to VT, would probably be more likely to find something similar in a religion or other humanities department than they would in a public policy department. Or it would be pretty easy to create an individualized major that gets close at most universities or colleges with standard humanities and social sciences departments.
Also, to Publisher’s point - my guess for the reason why Georgetown, George Washington and American don’t show up was that there are multiple majors at those schools that the students who would normally major in “public policy” elsewhere are split across.
However, I looked it up, and actually neither Georgetown nor American has anything that kind of close to public policy. American has majors in Legal Studies and Justice & Law, but despite the similar-sounding names, the programs actually focus on - well, law and justice, and not policy. (The Justice & Law major might scratch the itch for someone considering a major in this area, though.) The only policy major that Georgetown has is a Healthcare Management & Policy major in the nursing school. (The Culture & Politics major, however, may be relatively close in form and approach to the Humanities in Public Service major at VT).
George Washington has a public policy focus in its political science major. (It also has a philosophy major with a public affairs focus, and my guess is that would also get close to the HPS major at VT. However, the Human Services and Social Justice major would get even closer.)