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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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Research Paper Undergraduate
Prince Is the Political Theorist
Prince is the political theorist Niccolo Machiavelli's most famous work. The Prince is also one of the few political treatises that have spawned an adjective -- 'Machiavellian.' Call someone 'Machiavellian,' and you are…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Democratic stability in Britain and France
The history of the Europeans continent was marked by constant struggles between powers, state, and institutions which determined throughout history changes at the level of the European societies and of the states…
Paper Undergraduate
Yom Kippur War the Long-Term
As forces from Egypt, Syria, Jordan and Iraq massed around Israel's borders in 1967, Israel launched a six-day air campaign which crippled the capacity of its opponents to wage war and which expanded its borders to well…
Paper Undergraduate
Sputnik and the space race
¶ … New York Times treaded the Sputnik event very fairly, reporting on it in an objective manner and revealing the fear and confusion that was spreading throughout the U.S. government at the time.
Paper Undergraduate
Iraq Exit No Exit: America\'s
No Exit: America's Responsibility and Need to Remain in Iraq
Paper Undergraduate
Theodore Roosevelt: life and presidency
Theodore Roosevelt: An American for a New Age
Paper Undergraduate
Obama and McCain's approaches to economy, taxes, and Iraq
John McCain and Barack Obama both have sophisticated strategies to deal with the struggling economy. The McCain policy is based on old-school Republican economics. For example, the McCain plan calls for the lowering of…
Paper Masters
US military involvement in the Korean Conflict
The Korean Conflict Introduction How did the Korean conflict begin? What were the dynamics behind this war? How and why did the United States get involved? How was the Korean conflict linked to the Cold War? These and other issues will be addressed in this paper. Thesis: The Korean conflict was indeed the first battle of the Cold War, and the United States, although it was thoroughly unprepared when it went into battle, came out a winner even though the end was a virtual standoff. Background on how the U.S. become involved in the Korean conflict In the book, Truman and Korea: The Political Culture of the Early Cold War, author and professor Paul G. Pierpaoli Jr. explains that after World War II the Soviet Union emerged in a "new and more powerful stance," a direct challenge to America and its "…fragile allies" (Pierpaoli, 1999, p. 17). And notwithstanding the fact that the Cold War really began to take hold in 1947 and 1948 President Truman – known as a "legendary fiscal conservative" – was very reluctant to increase the amount of money spent on the military after WW II (Pierpaoli, 1999, p. 18).
Research Paper Doctorate
China\'s Economy and Foreign Policy
There have been radical changes in the internal political and economic scenario of China during the last two decades. (Lampton, 2001) The growing economic stability and control has increased the status of china to a…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Atomic Bomb and the Deciding
¶ … Atomic Bomb and the Deciding Event in Persuading the United States to Pursue Development of Nuclear Weapons