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Cuba
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Cuba is a richly studied subject across disciplines including political science, history, international relations, cultural studies, and literature. Its revolutionary government under Castro, its fraught relationship with the United States, and its Cold War alignment with the Soviet Union make it a compelling case for understanding ideology, foreign policy, and national identity. Students also encounter Cuba in literary contexts, particularly through works like Ernest Hemingway's The Old Man and the Sea, and in religious and cultural studies through traditions such as Santeria. The country's healthcare system, its diaspora communities, and its colonial history further expand its academic relevance across a wide range of courses.

Papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Historical analyses examine Cuba's relationship with the United States at key moments, including the Eisenhower era, as well as its loyalty to Spain during independence struggles. Cultural essays explore Cuban identity, Afro-Cuban religious practices, and the experiences of Cuban Americans. Policy-oriented papers assess governance, counterterrorism, and the future direction of the country. Some essays adopt a comparative lens, situating Cuba alongside other nations in the Caribbean or Latin America to evaluate political and social outcomes, particularly in areas like healthcare.

A strong essay on Cuba benefits from a focused thesis that connects a specific aspect of Cuban life — political, cultural, or historical — to a broader argument rather than attempting a general survey. Primary sources, government documents, and credible regional scholarship carry significant weight as evidence. The most common pitfall is letting political bias replace analysis; strong papers acknowledge Cuba's complexities and contradictions without reducing the country to a simple ideological symbol.

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Paper Undergraduate
Historiography of Chinese American History
The Exclusion Act; Redefining Citizenship
Paper Doctorate
Human Trafficking National Security Implications the Objective
The objective of this study is to conduct an analysis of how policy on human trafficking emerged relating to U.S. national security policy-making processes and politics. Included in this study will be information on America's cultural and political predispositions, organizational culture, bureaucratic politics and decision-making, civil-military relations, the dynamics between Congress, the public and the executive branch, as well as the interaction or influence of international organizations and actors.
Paper Doctorate
Scarface- Latin American Culture Scarface
Scarface (1932) film is a an American gangster movie, written by Ben Hecht, directed by Richard Rosson and Howard Hawks, and produced by Howard Hughes.Tony Montana turns out to be a drug league key player. Al Pacino has the power to terminate anyone in the picture, and he is as unpredictable, as a person, as his traits are also unpredictable on the screen. The Babylon club is the unauthorized command center of, ‘the Cuban crime wave", and Montana is an active person in the corrosive inclination.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Cold War and Its Legacy.
¶ … Cold War and its legacy. The Cold War between America and the Soviet Union had its origins at the end of World War II, when the two former allies began to look at the world and each other through different eyes.
Paper Doctorate
NAFTA Clinton, Congress, the Constitution and NAFTA
This paper analyzes NAFTA and the play between the President and Congress that was set in motion to subvert the Constitution. The play had actually been set in motion thanks to the policies of FDR during his final term. The result was the creation of a loophole that allowed Congress to view NAFTA not as a treaty.
Essay Doctorate
The French Revolution's Impact on Human Rights and Democracy
The French Revolution and its Enlightenment ideas about nationalism, universal rights and equal citizenship for all was extremely influential at the time it occurred, and was widely studied and imitated afterwards. Liberals and radicals in Europe, and increasingly the rest of the world, always recognized that the French Revolution was somehow uniquely theirs, especially in its attempt to end feudalism, state-supported churches, and the entrenched privileges of monarchs and aristocracies. It led to an expansion of commerce, industry, science and public education, and also created a new class of small farmers who owned land (Furet 35).
Paper Undergraduate
Thomas Merton (1915 -- 1968)
Thomas Merton (1915 -- 1968) was a prominent Catholic figure and one of the most important spiritual writers of the previous century, renowned for some of his influential works on Christian living, the first one of them…
Research Paper Undergraduate
JFK's Foreign Policy Failures: Cuba, Vietnam, and Legacy
What John F. Kennedy had going for him was that he was perhaps the most charismatic, engaging, youthful, accessible, and believable leader that the United States had of the 20th century.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Korematsu, Rasul, al-Odah, and Hamdi cases
Since the September 11 terrorist attacks in 2001, the Constitution of the United States has come under considerable scrutiny both by citizens and by the world in general. Issues relating to detaining persons suspected…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Guerillas Latin America Latin America
Latin America is composed of several communities where most of them are living in urban areas. Terrorism was built here through the use of guerrilla warfares. According to O'Connor, "It's a region of militant and…