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Internal Conflict
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Internal conflict refers to the psychological, moral, or emotional tension experienced within an individual, a group, an institution, or a society. As an academic subject, it appears across disciplines including psychology, literature, political science, sociology, and organizational studies. Its appeal lies in how it bridges the personal and the structural — a single person's crisis of identity can mirror broader cultural or historical fractures. Courses in developmental psychology engage with competing theoretical frameworks such as those of Freud, Erikson, and Pavlov to explain how unresolved inner tensions shape behavior, while literature courses examine how authors externalize internal struggle through character, symbolism, and tone.

The papers archived under this topic take a wide range of approaches. Literary analyses explore internal conflict through works like The Catcher in the Rye and modernist poetry, focusing on tone, theme, and symbolism to trace a character's psychological unraveling. Historical and geopolitical papers examine how internal tensions within nations or regions — including civil wars, the Soviet-Afghan War, and post-1860 political dynamics — escalate into open conflict. Other essays take a sociological or policy angle, investigating gang violence, national security threats, and the shaping of the Middle East after World War I. Applied approaches appear as well, covering conflict resolution in team leadership, stress intervention, and professional ethics in counseling contexts.

A strong essay on internal conflict requires a clearly bounded thesis that specifies whose conflict is being examined and at what scale — individual, institutional, or societal. Evidence drawn from primary texts, historical records, or psychological frameworks carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating internal conflict as a vague backdrop rather than as a specific, analyzable dynamic with identifiable causes, manifestations, and consequences.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Italian Feminism and Masculinity
Italy is a cultural hub of gender identity where issues of feminism and masculinism have been deeply entrenched for many years. For centuries Italy has been considered a more masculine country, though the majority of…
Research Paper Doctorate
Disillusionment in War: O'Brien, Owen, and Saving Private Ryan
Tim O' Brien, Wilfred Owen & "Saving Private Ryan"
Research Paper Doctorate
Personality Development Most Personality Theories
Most personality theories discuss development in terms of specific, progressive stages. Piaget and Erikson's theories of personality development follow a similar structure. However, the fundamental difference between…
Research Paper Doctorate
Sula novel advertising and cultural representation
The audience (MARKET) for Sula includes women of all ethnic/racial backgrounds, young adult classrooms discussing black history and racism, and any other individuals who are interested in the history of blacks in the…
Paper Undergraduate
Executive presentation overview and best practices
Organizational efficiency depends substantially on the ability of all departments, business units, and individual personnel to collaborate effectively toward a common goal. When personality conflicts and the…
Essay Doctorate
Post Colonial India and South Asian Identity
Post Colonial India and South Asian Identity
Essay Doctorate
Toyota Culture That Culminated in the Safety
¶ … Toyota culture that culminated in the safety issues and decline of the Toyota company although this is controversial;. Some say that the Toyota culture with its emphasis on family inheritance engendered decline,…
Research Paper Doctorate
Personal experience: themes and reflections
Change is a concept that is sometimes welcomed, though generally, is feared by most people. It marks the beginning of a new experience, but it also means the abolition of a routine.
Paper Doctorate
Newman's HEC and Fowler's Faith Stages in Nursing Practice
This paper includes an outline, 2 page annotated bibliography, and five-six page analysis of nursing theory. In particular, the nursing theorist Margaret Newman is compared/contrasted with the non-nursing theorist James Fowler. The paper offers in-depth analysis of Newman's theory of Health as Expanded Consciousness (HEC) and Fowlers Stages of Faith Development. Strengths and weaknesses are also explored and both philosophies are examined for their suitability and applicability to the field of nursing.
Essay Doctorate
Personality theories: strengths, limitations, and underlying assumptions
Personality theories explain personality through different approaches and assumptions. Each theory has strengths and weaknesses that raise questions concerning viability of the theory. Where one theory explains an aspect of personality, others show weakness and vice versa. Each of the theories are used to explain different aspects of personality.