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21st Century
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The 21st century as a historical topic invites students to examine the forces reshaping contemporary society, from globalization and economic policy to evolving social norms and institutional change. It appears across disciplines including history, sociology, political science, business, and public health, precisely because the period resists clean boundaries — students must treat the recent past as history while its consequences are still unfolding. What makes it academically compelling is the tension between continuity and transformation: inherited structures meeting new pressures in real time.

Papers on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some adopt a policy-analysis angle, examining how institutions like the Federal Reserve responded to economic conditions between 2000 and 2010. Others focus on social issues — racial bias and eyewitness memory, adolescent obesity, or the rights of gay and lesbian parents — situating contemporary debates within longer historical trajectories. Still others approach the period through organizational and management frameworks, exploring how leadership, ethics, and budgeting function in modern institutions. The common thread is using specific cases to say something broader about how society operates and changes.

A strong essay on the 21st century requires a focused thesis rather than a sweeping survey — scope it to a specific issue, policy, or social dynamic rather than the era as a whole. Evidence drawn from documented events, policy records, and verifiable social data carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating the period as too recent to analyze historically, which leads to opinion-heavy writing; grounding arguments in concrete developments and established frameworks keeps the analysis rigorous.

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Paper Doctorate
Disparity and Discrimination the History of Criminal
This paper addresses disparity and discrimination. Specifically, it looks at the issue of minorities in the criminal justice system. The paper also addresses the differences between discrimination and disparity, as they are often used interchangeably but they are not the same.
Paper Undergraduate
U.S. Capability to Support Two
The history of the United States of America (U.S.) is predicated on war. It can be said that it is a nation shaped in the crucible of war, which propelled it in its position as the most powerful nation the twentieth…
Paper Doctorate
Rise of Modern Japan Contrary
Contrary to public belief time does not progress linearly. Events do not occur one after the other (though it may seem that way). Therefore in order to understand a culture today, we must look at it in the context of…
Paper High School
Racism and Society -- Literature Letter Senator
This paper is a fictional letter to Kentucky Republican Senator Mitch McConnell. The purpose is to share with him the significance of two pieces of American 20th Century literature about racism in America: How It Feels to Be Colored Me (Hurston, 1928)and Just Walk on By (Staples, 1986). It suggests that the senator's continued opposition to the President after his re-election will forever place him on the wrong side of history because his fanatical opposition is quite obviously a function of racism among his political constituents.
Paper Undergraduate
Clinical Knowledge, Is Essential Within
Nursing research is a two-way academic communication – it results from data that comes from the ground up (the egg), but it must be processed by those who have the expertise and time to perform the proper steps within acceptable methodology (the chicken). In the field of contemporary medical care, particularly physician and nursing, there are five major reasons why more than a cursory knowledge of research and research methodology is essential for a professional career: expectation of a level of academic proficiency, ability to understand and communicate complex terminology to multiple stakeholders, an understanding of the research process so that as materials become available they are understandable, the possibility of conducting research and/or further interest in specific subject matter, and finally, the essential need to remain cognizant of contemporary medical developments.
Research Paper Undergraduate
International Organizations Since the End
Since the end of the Cold War, there have been serious debates concerning the reconsideration of the world order. The Cold War marked the unchanged situation in which the national state represented the most important…
Paper Undergraduate
Corporate Social Responsibilty
IRRESPONSIBLE LENDING PRACTICES and the MORTGAGE CRISIS OUTLINE
Paper Undergraduate
Boundaries Between Care and Cure:
The objective of the research proposed herein this document is one in which palliation will be explored and the notion of cure and care in the Hematological oncology setting will be examined.
Essay Doctorate
Financial and Economic Impact of Worker\'s Compensation
The program and concept of Workers' Compensation might appear to be a product of a civilized society and the modern era, but nothing could be further from the truth. In fact, Workers' Compensation has essentially been around for as long as people have been completing task for payment of some form of another, because people have always been getting hurt in some way, on the job. "The history of compensation for bodily injury begins shortly after the advent of written history itself1. The Nippur Tablet No. 3191 from ancient Sumeria in the Fertile Crescent outlines the law of Ur-Nammu, king of the city-state of Ur. It dates to approximately 2050 B.C.2. The law of Ur provided monetary compensation for specific injury to workers' body parts, including fractures.
Essay Doctorate
Systems of Power and Inequality in Early
Digital natives and emergent social change agents united over the Kony 2012 campaign in a manner that put a new spin on the concept of critical consciousness. While Paulo Freire and other critical theorists tend to focus primarily on the evolution of awareness of oppressed people, the new digital media appears to support revolution on both sides of the equation. In the discussion that follows, I examine how critical theory is being applied in the new digital media to address structural and cultural violence. I contend that the overlapping systems of power and equality, which are justified on the basis of class, wealth, gender, race, religion, and sexual orientation, have reached highs of exposure and vulnerability through the enhanced populist communication that is enabled by the new digital media. The Kony 2012 campaign, the Occupy Movement and the studies of American education by Jonathan Kozal will act as the touchstones of my argument. I begin the discussion with a brief exploration of the terms critical consciousness, critical pedagogy, structural violence, and cultural violence.