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Japan
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Japan occupies a distinctive place in academic study across disciplines including history, economics, political science, international relations, and literature. Its trajectory from feudal society to industrial power, its role in twentieth-century warfare, and its postwar economic transformation give scholars and students rich material to analyze. The country's cultural identity, government structures, and position within global trade networks make it a compelling subject in business, area studies, and humanities courses alike. Works such as Gail Tsukiyama's Samurai's Garden bring Japan into literary analysis, while frameworks drawn from economics and policy studies address its modern development.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Historical and military analysis features prominently, with essays examining the attack on Pearl Harbor, the Battle of Iwo Jima, and the Battle of Okinawa from strategic and causal perspectives. Economic analysis is equally well represented, covering Japan's financial crisis of the 1990s, the Asian currency crisis, the rise of just-in-time manufacturing, and the competitive dynamics faced by Japanese automakers during periods of currency pressure known as endaka. Comparative and policy-oriented essays examine Japan alongside South Korea, explore trade agreements such as the Japan-Thailand Economic Partnership Agreement, and assess market-entry strategies for foreign companies like Coach Inc.

A strong essay on Japan benefits from a clearly scoped thesis that commits to one dimension — historical, economic, cultural, or literary — rather than attempting to cover the country broadly. Evidence drawn from specific events, policy decisions, or trade data carries more weight than general claims about national character. A common pitfall is treating Japan as a monolith; acknowledging internal complexity and historical change produces more persuasive, nuanced arguments.

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Essay Undergraduate
Fortune 500 Co. The Company That I
This paper is about Starbucks, and its strategy. The paper contains an analysis of the external environment through parts of a PEST. There is a quickie SWOT. There is a discussion of the company's history and its recent financial performance. There is also a discussion of the factors that Starbucks needs to consider in the future.
Thesis Masters
Diversity Has Many Meanings, and Can Be
Diversity has many meanings, and can be difficult to truly define. It can be based on culture, language, location, or countless other facets. However, when it comes to health issues there are often specific populations…
Essay Doctorate
Open-Ended Question. I Don\'t Know About Organizational
This paper is a series of questions for a discussion board. Most are broad, ambiguous questions best answered in a thesis that are answered in a few hundred words. Like the 2 page answer on how to eliminate global poverty, or the 1 page on whether firms that have CSR programs outperform those that do not.
Paper Undergraduate
Learning From Great Leaders
The use of very effective rhetoric by Pericles, who was ruler of the Athens City-State in 440 BCE, is still considered an example of the great use of language to bring people up when they are down and to bring people down who are too arrogant. This paper discusses the importance of using powerful language in public speaking, and brings in iconic CEOs like Jack Welch and Lee Iococca.
Paper Masters
Major trade theories and their economic implications
Trade theories propose different perspectives to explain why commercial exchanges occur and what motivates countries to focus on particular goods or services when exporting or importing. The Hecksher-Ohlin model is one of these theories. Some impediments to its application include transportation costs, specialization and political considerations: these lead commercial actors to follow other options.
Essay Doctorate
Coca-Cola Company organizational goals and strategic adoption analysis
This paper is about Coca – Cola Company and its strategy. The idea was to look at a specific strategic initiative from the past year or so and how the company defined that strategy, and how the company was able to implement that strategy. There is both description and analysis in the paper.
Essay Doctorate
Transboundary offshore oil and gas resource governance frameworks
Different lifecycle stages of cooperationinclude auctioning licenses, exploration, financial return settlements, and cessation of oil or gas field. The cooperationagreements are known as joint development agreements, cross-boundary unitization agreements, and framework agreements. State appointed joint regulating body, state-run oil & gas companies, and international oil companies as licensees can be parties to such agreements.
Thesis Undergraduate
Private Cloud Computing Risk and Challenges Bahrain Government
Abstract In the recent past, cloud computing has become a critical cost effective solution for entities seeking a model designed to enable them accomplish business objectives while at the same time easing their computing needs. Different countries have had different experiences with cloud computing. In that regard, there is a need to explore not only the challenges but also the benefits and the lessons learnt with regard to the application of cloud computing in different jurisdictions.
Essay Doctorate
Background and institutional factors affecting organizational effectiveness in assignment environments
The environment in which an institution operates also shapes the cultural values, goals, norms and institutional beliefs. Therefore, because of such a consistent decision seem to be institutionally correct even when they do not align with the broader ethical standards. In its wider perspective, such consistency becomes a mindset, a filter through which managers view their institutions.
Essay Doctorate
Conflict Management and Negotiation, Case 8 Sick
Kelly, Mark and Suzanne – two Canadians and a British citizens, respectively – are working as Assistant Language Teachers (ALTs) within the Japan Exchange and Teaching Program (JET) in Soto, Japan. In an effort to improve the English education standards used in Japanese schools, the national government designed the JET program to facilitate the exchange of English teachers from international locales. Government agencies and other educational experts believed that the process of exchanging teachers would serve to further the growing commitment to internalization on the municipal level, emphasizing the value of English-language competency for Japanese citizens and government workers. In order to properly address the instance of workplace issues or complaints from its ALTs, the JET program allowed for a process of resolution mediated by the Conference of Local Authorities for International Relations (CLAIR). Although the CLAIR program was intended to be proactive in nature, its standards were only applicable if the host institution remained unable to resolve the conflict through independent means. Case study 8 thus examines the occurrence of several conflicts between Japanese authorities and its contingent of foreign workers teaching English as ALTs.