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Anthropology
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Anthropology is the broad scientific study of human beings, encompassing their biology, cultures, histories, and social organization across time and place. It appears in courses ranging from introductory social science surveys to upper-division seminars in archaeology, cultural theory, and human evolution. What makes it academically compelling is its scope: anthropology sits at the intersection of the humanities and sciences, asking fundamental questions about what it means to be human, how societies form and change, and how culture shapes individual life. Topics such as modern human divergence, cross-cultural comparison, and the anthropological study of religion illustrate how the field moves fluidly between biological evidence and social interpretation.

The papers archived here reflect a wide range of approaches. Some take a historical and archaeological angle, examining ancient skeletal remains, tomb artifacts, or depictions of foreign lands in Ancient Egyptian literature to reconstruct past societies. Others are ethnographic, grounding analysis in direct cultural observation or applying social theory to economic and ethical issues. Comparative work is also common, setting different cultures or institutions side by side to identify patterns. Applied perspectives appear as well, connecting anthropological frameworks to real-world contexts such as prison systems, military institutions, and regional studies like anthropology in Turkey.

A strong anthropology essay begins with a focused thesis that commits to a specific claim about culture, society, or human behavior rather than summarizing a subfield broadly. Evidence drawn from ethnographic fieldwork, archaeological findings, or established theoretical frameworks carries the most weight. The most common pitfall to avoid is treating culture as static or monolithic — effective analysis consistently acknowledges that cultures are dynamic, internally varied, and shaped by historical context.

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Paper Doctorate
Anthropology -- Short and Long
Fieldwork -- a type of anthropological (and other discipline-specific) research that involves data collection through direct observation of study subjects and face-to-face interviews.
Research Paper Doctorate
Health care options for pregnant women
Healthcare for Pregnant Women Comparison: U.S., Switzerland and Canada
Paper Masters
Anthropology in Turkey Changing Role
This is a paper on the preparation of an anthropological researcher who is preparing to venture into Turkey and look at the section of the society (the youth) and their position in the society and how the social media is affecting their means of reacting to the status that the society, particularly the government has placed them under.
Research Paper Doctorate
Alcohol and Marijuana on Human
A review of literature regarding the effect of marijuana and alcohol on the human memory
Paper Undergraduate
Risk assessment frameworks and methodologies
Businesses today are faced with a range of security challenges unlike any of those that their predecessors have ever faced. Among these different challenges are the physical protection of the building and the protection of data and intellectual property. This may sound like a relatively easy mission; however, each of these two types of security has a number of different elements to it, and the interplay of these elements can make the process of keeping a company or organization secure. For example, in terms of keeping a building physically safe, a security plan must cover the physical building itself, any equipment or supplies inside the building secure, and the staff and any visitors to the building must also be kept safe. (Moreover, the staff and visitors must feel that they are being kept safe, which appearance can be even more difficult than actually keeping individuals safe.) In terms of keeping data safe, a security system must include everything from appropriate encryption policies, password protocols, and staff training on what information must remain within the confines of the business. This last provision must also include instructions on which members of the staff have access to what information. The following security assessment and design has been designed for RAI, which is a for-profit kidney dialysis chain. The chain is currently expanding from three offices to eight sites (a process that should take about 18 months). As a part of this expansion, the company CEO has asked for a complete overview of its security procedures. This review is based on the following definition of providing security, which includes serious consideration of the nuts and bolts of security while also focusing on the too-often-neglected factors of organizational structure. This definition of security can be phrased as the "intentional actions whose purpose is to provide guarantees of safety to subjects, both in the present and in the future'
Paper Undergraduate
Modern human divergence and evolutionary pathways
¶ … divergence between humans beings was once commonly considered by scholars to have happened no later than the early Pleistocene, or over 1.5 million years ago. Why did 19th and even late 20th century evolutionary…
Research Paper Doctorate
Primitive war: concepts and historical contexts
Marvin Harris on the Cultural Materialist explanation for warfare ("Primitive War" in Cows, Pigs, Wars, & Witches)
Research Paper Undergraduate
Rodin, David it Is Amazing
It is amazing how much of a personal impact a sculpture can make, especially when that work of art is something like Auguste Rodin's "The Thinker." Unfortunately, because his sculpture is so well liked, many companies…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Sources of diversity on campus and sociological perspectives
This paper discusses the sources of diversity on campus. It will also explore the questions a sociologist may pose about the significance of diversity in the educational environment.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Systematic Study of Organizational Behavior Explained
As the very denomination suggests, Organizational Behavior studies both the way in which people act within an organization and the attitudes they display within such frame, on a non-random basis.