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Debate
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Debate, as an academic subject within communications, encompasses the structured examination of contested issues through reasoned argument, evidence, and rebuttal. It appears across disciplines ranging from political science and law to ethics, linguistics, and cultural studies. What makes debate academically compelling is its demand for both analytical rigor and rhetorical precision — students must not only understand an issue but construct and defend a position against opposing claims. The breadth of topics treated under this heading reflects how fundamental argumentation is to academic inquiry itself, touching on moral permissibility, policy, identity, economics, and justice.

Papers on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some engage directly with ethical debates, examining questions such as the moral permissibility of abortion or the role race plays in the death penalty. Others are comparative, weighing the influence of historical events or contrasting cultural and religious frameworks such as Mahayana Buddhism or restorative justice models. Case-study approaches appear alongside policy analyses, including discussions of financing professional sports arenas or the international economics of trade. Research design and methodology also feature prominently, with some papers focusing on how to propose and justify an appropriate method for investigating a debatable question.

A strong essay on a debate topic requires a clearly scoped thesis that takes a defensible position rather than merely summarizing multiple viewpoints. Evidence drawn from credible primary and secondary sources — legal cases, scholarly research, historical records, or policy documents — carries the most weight. One common pitfall is treating both sides of an issue as equally supported when the available evidence actually favors one position; a well-argued essay acknowledges counterarguments but does not artificially balance an uneven evidentiary record.

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Essay Doctorate
Vietnam Intervention of Communism in South Vietnam
Intervention of Communism in South Vietnam
Paper Masters
Gangs, Drugs and Violence Compartmentalized
Gang-related drug violence has been a problem within inner cities for years. A potential solution would be to legalize the sale and trafficking of drugs within a certain finite radius within these cities. An analysis of The Wire and pertinent research into this subject indicates that doing so would significantly reduce gang-related drug violence.
Paper Undergraduate
Moral rights in business ethics and marketing
In this paper, we are going to be studying what tactics marketers can use to sell to consumers (which are following different provisions of the law). This will be accomplished by focusing on: how abiding by legal guidelines will help firms to meet basic ethical requirements and ensuring that they are always in compliance with a host of regulations. The combination of these factors will demonstrate how this balance has allowed the interests of businesses and stakeholders to always be taken into account.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Teaching strategies for Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn stands apart from other great literature, making it a prime text for students from junior high to adulthood. The text forces discussion on many levels, and teaching it requires…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Global commerce and human rights
Corporate Responsibility in a Global Marketplace
Research Paper Undergraduate
Ethanol as Alternative Fuel: Benefits, Costs, and Trade-Offs
¶ … Americans are beginning to be concerned about alternative fuels, do to the possibility of global warming, the significant increase of gasoline for automobiles and other vehicles and the growing tendency toward green…
Paper Undergraduate
Sufism, Jung, Kaballah Interfaith Dialogue
Interfaith dialogue and Peace negotiations: Jewish Kabbalah, Islamic Sufism and Jung
Essay Doctorate
Articles of Confederation With the New Constitution
Introduction In this short essay, this author will compare and contrast the Articles of Confederation with the new Constitution of 1787. We will see what were the strengths and weaknesses of the Articles vis-à-vis the Constitution and give specific instances that demonstrate the weakness of the Articles, in particular its financial issues. Analysis Default and debt is an American tradition and it was initiated with gusto in the days following the Revolution when Dutch and French holders of American bonds found it impossible to get regular payments on the Continental notes that they held. Additionally, depression had struck the new nation in by the mid-1780s, raising questions arose about the nature of American democracy and the ability of the new government to function. Conservatives believed that the answer the nation's problems lay in a stronger national government. Most radicals believed it was up to the states to relieve the financial burden of the people. These sentiments fostered a movement for a new constitution. Political differences soon stimulated the creation of political parties ("The articles of," 2010). Differences between the Articles and the Constitution The Articles of Confederation had many flaws, many potentially fatal. With the drafting of a new Constitution in 1787, the founding fathers pointed many of these lessons and short comings and corrected them in the new federal Constitution. When the first Convention was called for initially in Annapolis in 1786, the founders only called for the altering and amendment of the Articles of Confederation. Few showed up in Annapolis in September 1786. Only New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Delaware and Virginia sent representatives, which led the convention to only recommend another convention in 1787. This new convention that was recommended for 1787 in Philadelphia became the Convention to draft the new Constitution ("Compare and contrast;," 2011).
Paper Undergraduate
Predestination and free will: philosophical perspectives
The debate over predestination and free will played a formative role on the evolution of different Christian faiths, particularly during the Middle Ages (Armstrong, 85). It remains one of the most divisive…
Paper Undergraduate
Life of Cedric Jennings
The 2008 Presidential election -- the outcome of which led to the first election of an African-American leader of this nation, or indeed of any Western power -- and the even more recent arrest of Harvard scholar Henry…