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Diplomacy
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Diplomacy is the practice of managing relationships between states and other political actors through negotiation, communication, and formal agreements rather than direct force. It appears across political science, international relations, history, and government courses, where students are asked to analyze how nations pursue their interests while avoiding or resolving conflict. The topic carries enduring academic interest because it sits at the intersection of power, ethics, and language — requiring analysis of how countries frame terms, build coalitions, and sustain relations over time. Papers drawing on figures like Henry Kissinger or events like the Cold War illustrate how specific doctrines and personalities have shaped American diplomatic tradition, while work on Native nations and European contact pushes the concept into colonial and legal history.

The archived papers approach diplomacy from several distinct angles. Historical analysis is common, covering episodes from early negotiations between Indian nations and European powers through the Cold War and the Korean War, with some work applying strategic frameworks such as Clausewitz's concepts to evaluate military-diplomatic decisions. Comparative approaches examine political and economic change across Latin American countries, while geopolitical and energy competition papers take a policy-oriented lens. Rhetorical analysis also appears, with attention to speeches like Ronald Reagan's address at the Brandenburg Gate as instruments of diplomatic pressure.

A strong essay on diplomacy needs a focused, arguable thesis — claiming that a specific strategy succeeded or failed, or that a particular framework better explains an outcome than alternatives do. Evidence drawn from primary sources, treaty records, speeches, or policy documents carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating diplomacy as a neutral process rather than examining whose interests it serves and whose are marginalized in any given negotiation.

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Essay Doctorate
How technology expands American power and global influence
America is considered as the cradle of contemporary anti-imperialism and the pioneer of a mighty empire across the globe. The country's global position in the 21st Century is defined by tensions in its policies and…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Populist charismatic dictators: the cases of Stalin, Mao, and Ho Chi Minh
There has been a wide debate concerning the elements which brought to power dictators such as Josef Stalin, Mao Zedong, or Ho Chi Minh. Some have argued that in fact they were the example of democracy or the choice of…
Research Paper Doctorate
Bilateral and Multilateral Diplomacy
Diplomacy normally refers to the technique of dealing with the governments through communication in contradiction to the war, military deterrence, subversion, propaganda etc. This is applied indifferently for the way as…
Paper Undergraduate
King John of England
The reign of King John of England is a story of "failure" according to the British Broadcasting Company (BBC) (www.bbc.com).KingJohn failed, Dr. Mike Ibeji of the BBC writes, because: one, he lost a portion of western…
Paper Undergraduate
Economics and international relations in nation building
To what extent is Samuel P. Huntington's 'Clash of Civilizations' model useful in explaining the conduct of international relations in the post-11 September 2001 world?
Paper Doctorate
Crusaders and the Church What
The Crusaders and the Church Introduction What has been the legacy of the Crusades? Were the Crusades a negative historical event or was there a positive side to these events? Given that the Crusades were politically motivated, and that there were intellectual and technological benefits to Europe, did the Crusades actually benefit the Christian movement? These issues and others will be critiqued in this paper. What were the motivating factors of the Crusades? In his book Norwich University professor of history John McCannon explains that medieval popes had the power to demand troops and financial resources in order to launch "holy wars" that were (and are) known as Crusades. These Crusades were fought in order to "convert nonbelievers to Catholicism, to crush Christian movements" that popes believed were "heretical," and to "resist attacks" by Muslims and other foreigners that did not believe in Christianity.
Paper Undergraduate
Prince by Niccolo Machiavelli. Specifically,
¶ … Prince by Niccolo Machiavelli. Specifically, it will argue the disadvantage of being defenseless or helpless in the face of attack. Machiavelli says, "A man who wishes to make a vocation of being good at all times…
Paper Masters
American victory and British defeat in the Revolutionary War
American Victory and the Waning British Empire
Research Paper Undergraduate
Female characters in Hamlet across two film productions
Frailty thy name is woman.": a contrast of the female characters in "Hamlet" as portrayed in two 20th century film productions
Paper Undergraduate
Political culture of race and racism
¶ … Political Culture of Racism and Criminology