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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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Paper Undergraduate
Wrestling techniques and competitive practices
Perhaps even in the days of the true Greco-Roman wrestling the event walked the line between sports and entertainment. Professional wrestling is known by those that both love or hate it as merely an entertainment.
Paper Undergraduate
Western Sahara conflict and regional disputes
In the early years of civilization in the Western Saharan regions, civilizations used trade and exchange of services as a means by which to maintain the peace, and to meet the economic and social needs of their…
Paper Undergraduate
Jacob: A Case Study Jacob
This paper is a case study of a young child named Jacob. Jacob's life history is profiled, followed by an analysis of his home and school behavior as seen through the rubrics of Erik Erikson's stages of development and Lev Vygotsky's learning theories. The paper concludes with a summary and recommendations for how to improve Jacob's education and living situation.
Paper Undergraduate
Elizabeth I Research and Review
To fully understand the life of Elizabeth I requires: examining her role as a leader and head of state. The means that research that was conducted is looking at five different articles that discussed Elizabeth's overall…
Paper Undergraduate
Ethnic conflict in Xinjiang: an application of internal security dilemma
There has been much discussion on this issue and from different points of view. An important study conducted on the Xinjiang and the internal security dilemma has been conducted by Jiaxing Xu, "The Ethnic Security Dilemma and Ethnic Violence: An Alternative Empirical Model and its Explanatory Power" (2012) in which the role of ethnic violence and is discussed as a possibility of explaining the ethnic security dilemma.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Civilization and Barbarism the Path
The path that modern people walk, across the balanced precipice between civilized and barbarous is frequently fictionalized. For many authors and readers alike the need to remind one's self of the precarious nature of…
Research Paper Undergraduate
HR 5225 and Its Mental Health Impact on Chicano Communities
Effect of HR 5225 or Diabetes Prevention Access and Care Act to Chicano mental health
Research Paper Undergraduate
Characters and the Way They
¶ … characters and the way they evolve throughout the novels it's imperative, first of all, to establish their roles in the course of action.
Paper Undergraduate
Bertha in Bronte\'s Jane Eyre
The character of Bertha Mason is more than just another personality that adds drama to Charlotte Bronte's novel, Jane Eyre. The character of Bertha becomes an outlet for Jane's suppressed emotions and an extension of…
Paper Undergraduate
Conflict resolution and transformation
Evaluating the contributions of external intervention to internal conflict resolution and transformation