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Contemporary Issues
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Contemporary issues is a broad academic topic that invites students to examine the pressing challenges and debates shaping modern life across virtually every discipline. Courses in business, education, criminal justice, management, tourism, nursing, and the social sciences all treat it as a framework for connecting theoretical knowledge to real-world problems. What makes this topic academically compelling is its immediacy — students must engage with questions that affect quality of life, national development, resource allocation, and ethical decision-making in ways that demand both critical thinking and evidence-based reasoning.

The papers archived under this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Some take a sector-specific angle, focusing on contemporary issues within early childhood education, American business, or tourism. Others apply ethical theory or strategic management frameworks to evaluate how individuals and organizations respond to change. Several papers use a case-based approach, examining how particular communities — including migrant populations — navigate modern cultural conditions. Still others address professional fields such as criminal justice, human resource management, and nursing, analyzing how current trends reshape practice and policy within those disciplines.

A strong essay on contemporary issues begins with a tightly scoped thesis that identifies a specific problem, context, and evaluative lens rather than attempting to survey an entire field. Evidence drawn from peer-reviewed journal articles carries the most weight, as it grounds arguments in current research rather than general observation. The most common pitfall is choosing a topic so broad — such as "issues in business" or "problems in education" — that the essay never moves beyond surface description. Focusing on one concrete issue and developing a clear, arguable position will produce a far more persuasive result.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Explicating Religion's Place in Society
Based on Young's discussion in chapter 1 of The World's Religions, religion has been understood and described primarily as a way for man to contextualize his existence and to reconcile that with the notion of a higher…
Paper Undergraduate
Integration of Technology in Social Classroom
The utilization of technology in education has gained a lot of popularity in the recent years. Great enhancements in computer software and hardware in the past decades have been noted and this has resulted to the…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Conflict styles and their applications in organizational settings
How do I react to conflict? I took the Conflict Style Questionnaire and for the rating on person "A," I had 4 out of five between 15 and 20, which is representative of a "strong style." That is a dear female friend of…
Paper Undergraduate
Leadership styles and their organizational impact
The importance of the role of leadership and how it relates to success in an organization is being realised more and more in the present age of business. More importance is being attached to developing efficient…
Paper Undergraduate
How to Address Healthcare Fraud in Your Agency
Miscoding on the Billing Forms Discussion Board
Paper Masters
John Rawls and Justice
Today's United States society is not just because it violates both principles of John Rawls' theory of justice based on the "original position." This paper will explain Rawls' principles and show how the U.S.
Research Paper Doctorate
Should a Company Water Down Ethics in Order to Get a Profitable Outcome?
In the first place, lives are more valuable -- far more valuable -- than jobs. True, without a job many adult individuals would suffer, but given the possibility that the bug in the prototype that Occidental Engineering…
Essay Doctorate
Nursing concepts and research methodologies
The article, "Nursing Workforce Issues and Trends Affecting Emergency Departments" by Robinson and colleagues (2004) looks at the range of contemporary issues which directly impact the quality of care which is received…
Paper Doctorate
Perspective and sight in Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels
Many argue that it was Swift’s intention is to ridicule his government, his rulers, and human nature as a whole. However, this point is arguable to say the least. In Part IV of his book, Swift provides illustrations of the two poles of the human condition as Lemuel Gulliver, the main character, finds himself on an island inhabited by two species. He encounters the Houyhnhnms who are horse-like animals and the Yahoos who are more human-like. The Houyhnhnms are intelligent, noble creatures governed wholly by reason, and the Yahoos are naked, dirty humanoids that seem at best, barbaric creatures.
Paper Undergraduate
Constructivism and Feminism Ideas Identity and Gender
This paper summarizes Tickner's and Wendt's articles on International Relations. Tickner critique's Morgenthau's theory on IR. Claiming it is a masculine point of view, which she does acknowledge, but wants to add a feminine dimension. The masculine only focuses on objectivity which IR is not all about. IR is also about cooperation and self-reliance. Morgenthau misses this in his original analysis.