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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
Marx and Madame Bovary: Literary and ideological perspectives
Analysis of Emma's character in the context of the Marx and Engels' "Communist Manifesto"
Research Paper Doctorate
KFC Ltd. Analysis of Kentucky
Analysis of Kentucky Fried Chicken (Japan) Limited Case Study
Paper Undergraduate
Genre of Children\'s Literature
Three Children's stories at the second grade level are discussed and analyzed. These stories are "the Stranger," "Tuff Fluff: The Case of Duckie's Missing Brain," and "Basket Moon" These stories are analyzed by 1. plot, 2. order, 3. conflict 4. suspense, 5. climax and resolution, 6. depiction of themes.
Essay Doctorate
Conflict in A Separate Peace: internal and external struggles
Conflict can be said to be a disagreement which is brought about by a threat (real or perceived) to the interests or needs of an individual or group of individuals. When conflict is between several parties, it is…
Paper Undergraduate
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Change in America Through Turn of the Century Literature
Paper Undergraduate
Brave New World Not-So Brave
¶ … Brave New World not-So Brave New World -- the pursuit of pleasure at the expense of truth and real happiness
Paper Undergraduate
Women's equal rights and training for sustainable peace in failed states
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Paper Undergraduate
Intel What Were the Different
What were the different changes at Intel over the first three years of Barrett's tenure?
Paper Doctorate
Theories on Addiction: Old and the New
Addiction in the Earlier Centuries, Early Theories
Paper Undergraduate
Adult dysthymia: characteristics, diagnosis, and treatment
Dysthymia is a prevalent form of depression, with significant psychiatric comorbidity, elevated risk of suicide, and often lasting more than a decade. Despite how common this form of depression is, it often goes undiagnosed until the easily recognizable symptoms of major depression manifest. This is unfortunate because it is treatable using both psychotherapy and antidepressant medications. In the future, clinicians and researchers will undoubtedly focus on improving the psychological instruments and laboratory tests used to detect dysthymia in an effort to intervene on behalf of those suffering from this mild form of clinical depression.