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20th Century
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The twentieth century stands as one of the most examined periods in historical study, spanning sweeping political transformations, economic upheavals, social movements, and cultural shifts that continue to shape the present. Students across disciplines — including history, sociology, political science, literature, and business — engage with this era because it offers a dense, interconnected field of events and ideas. Its breadth means that courses ranging from American history to organizational theory to developmental psychology can all find relevant material within it. Works and figures such as Mary Parker Follett, Karl Marx, and F. Scott Fitzgerald appear as touchstones precisely because their ideas were tested, challenged, or popularized during this period, making the century intellectually fertile ground for academic argument.

The papers written on this topic reflect genuinely diverse approaches. Some take a political and foreign policy angle, examining American power and international interventions such as United Nations missions. Others apply sociological frameworks to analyze family structures, single motherhood, deviance, and social control. Literary analysis appears through close readings of works like Fitzgerald's fiction, while economic and organizational thought is explored through figures like Marx and Follett. Still others address psychological and developmental questions, including personality theory and learning frameworks, showing how broadly the twentieth century functions as a historical container for multiple disciplines.

A strong essay on this topic requires a focused, specific thesis rather than a sweeping claim about the entire century. Evidence carries the most weight when drawn from primary sources, documented case studies, or well-grounded theoretical frameworks tied to the historical moment being examined. The most common pitfall is scope creep — attempting to address too many developments at once without developing any single argument with sufficient depth and supporting detail.

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Paper Undergraduate
Pandemic outbreaks as organizational risks in aviation: exposure factors and transmission
air traffic has continued to increase and it now constitutes a considerable proportion of the travelling public. The amount of long-hour flights has increased significantly. Based on the International Civil Aviation…
Paper Undergraduate
Non-Market Strategy Project Pollution Politics Business
Globalization has changed the planet in numerous ways, constructive and unconstructive; perhaps the most influential of these changes has been the more explicit and perhaps a far more extreme commoditization of a number…
Thesis Masters
Fine arts: history, theory, and contemporary practice
The style of used by Henri Matisse in the painting Still Life after Jan Davidsz. de Heem's ‘La Desserte' is that of Cubism. Cubism is a name for art suggested in 1909 by Henri Matisse and is a "non-objective approach to painting developed originally in France around 1906 by Picasso and Baque. Cubism is characterized by the emphasis on the process of construction "of creating a pictorial rhythm and converting the represented forms into the essential geometric shape: the cube, the sphere, the cylinder, and the cone." (Boguslawski, 2005) The painting is in oils and painted during a "pivotal period in Matisse's artistic development when he temporarily abandoned his interest in decorative patterning and brilliant color for darker, more abstract compositions. The curators propose that these geometrically composed paintings, dominated by blacks and grays, were at least partly a response to World War I, which erupted in Europe in 1914, a year after Matisse, returned to Paris from Morocco." (Levin, 2010) It is stated that the works accomplished by Matisse during these period also serve to "represent his attempt to absorb and respond to the challenge of cubism, then the dominant trend in the avant-garde art world, with its radical reinvention of form and space." (Levin, 2010)
Research Paper Doctorate
Criminological perspectives on racism throughout history
Racism has always been a defining feature of the American criminal justice system, including racial profiling, disparities in arrests convictions and sentencing between minorities and whites, and in the use of the death penalty. Racial profiling against blacks, immigrants and minorities has always existed in the American criminal justice system, as has the belief that minorities in general and blacks in particular are always more likely to commit crimes. American society and its legal system were founded on white supremacy going back to the colonial period, and critical race criminology would always consider these historical factors as well as the legal means to counter them.
Thesis Doctorate
19th Century Women\'s Suffrage in Europe
Most countries in Western and Central Europe, including Great Britain granted women the vote right after World War I, and only in the Scandinavian nations of Norway and Finland did they receive it earlier than that. France stood out as exceptional, however, no matter that it was the homeland of democratic revolution and of the idea of equal rights for women. It also had a highly conservative side and did not allow women's suffrage until 1945. In Southern and Eastern Europe, granting the vote to women was usually delayed at least that long as well, especially due to the influence on the Catholic Church. In any event, the authoritarian or even fascist nature of the regimes in most of these countries made voting irrelevant, but for the most part no movements for women's suffrage and equality even existed in these regions in the 19th Century. Women's suffrage advanced fastest in the Northern Protestant European countries that had the strongest liberal and democratic traditions un the 19th Century, particularly Britain and Scandinavia, although almost everywhere, working class and social democratic parties were the first to formally endorse female voting rights.
Paper Undergraduate
Alfred Adler Was One of the First
Alfred Adler was one of the first supporters of Sigmund Freud's theories of psychoanalysis in Vienna in the eraly-20th Century, although the two psychiatrists had a particularly harsh falling out in 1911 and never reconciled. Adler's basic theories were so distinctive from Freud's that any attempt to combine them would have been impossible, given that he denied the existence of the id, ego and superego. In general, Adler minimized the role of genetics, sexuality and unconscious drives in human personality formation is favor of conscious goal-setting that overcame the childhood sense of dependence, powerlessness and inferiority and created a mature, competent and self-realized adult.
Research Paper Masters
Police Describe the Impact of Sir Robert
Describe the impact of Sir Robert Peel on American policing
Paper Undergraduate
European Union Member States Relations With Their Overseas Territories
This paper will assess the past and current legal status of OCTs and ACPs and their significance to European Union. The main question this paper will focus on will be: where does Europe end, is European Union defined with its continent or are these overseas territories also part of EU?
Paper Doctorate
Robert Hayden, One of the Most Important
Robert Hayden, one of the most important black poets of the 20th Century, was born in Detroit, Michigan in 1913 and grew up in extreme poverty in a racially mixed neighborhood. His parents divorced when he was a child and he was raised by their neighbors, William and Sue Ellen Hayden, and not until he was in his forties did he learn that Asa Sheffey and Gladys Finn were his biological parents. During the Great Depression he was employed for two years by the Federal Writer's Project, and published his first volume of poetry Heart-Shape in the Dust in 1940
Essay Doctorate
The 1963 coup d'état in Vietnam: causes, consequences, and historical significance
During the latter half of the 20th century, the country of Vietnam became a warzone. North Vietnam, led by the Communist leader Ho Chi Minh, invaded the Capitalist governed South Vietnam and it embroiled the United…