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Literature Review
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A literature review is a structured survey of existing research on a given subject, designed to map what is already known, identify gaps, and establish context for new inquiry. It appears across virtually every academic discipline — from medicine and social science to education and business — because nearly every field requires writers to situate their arguments within an ongoing scholarly conversation. What makes the form academically demanding is that it requires critical synthesis rather than simple summary: writers must evaluate sources, trace patterns across findings, and build a coherent understanding of how a topic has developed over time.

The papers archived here reflect the breadth of subjects that a literature review can address. Some take a clinical or scientific orientation, examining topics such as kidney transplantation, stem cell treatment of leukemia, and maggot debridement therapy for necrotic tissue. Others focus on social and policy concerns, including teen pregnancy risk factors, fatherless homes and child development, affordable housing for low-income families, and special education referral processes for Haitian students. Still others address organizational and research methodology questions, such as pay-for-performance models, scenario planning, and international research methods. Across all these angles, the core task remains the same: synthesizing journal-based evidence to support a focused argument.

A strong literature review establishes a clearly scoped research question and organizes sources thematically or conceptually rather than listing them one by one. Evidence drawn from peer-reviewed journals carries the most weight, and writers should prioritize recent, field-specific studies. The most common pitfall is letting the review become purely descriptive — strong papers consistently evaluate the quality, limitations, and implications of the sources they discuss.

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Paper Doctorate
Gun Violence in December of 2012, Sandy
School shootings have become an increasingly visible reality in the discussion over public safety, especially in the wake of the Newtown, Connecticut massacre. The research proposal here aims to determine the role played by perception and media framing in how we understand suburban school shootings versus the chronic gun violence issues in urban school settings.
Essay Doctorate
Walmart Worker Rights Violations and Corporate Governance Reform
This study examines the legislative and judicial climate that enables corporations like Wal-Mart to engage in practices that violate workers' rights. The popular consensus is that Wal-Mart, the largest retail store in…
Paper Undergraduate
Illuminate the Influence of Parents
1a) The task of undergoing research to better illuminate the influence of parents and parenting on college-age drinking habits is indeed a worthwhile endeavor. This is as a result of the fact that the family unit has a tremendous amount of influence on the shaping of an individual's character and habits. "All activities of the human individual start in the family and many of them remain within its realm for a long time. The family acts as the first niche and context for protecting the child and fostering all aspects of its maturation and development.
Paper High School
Antigua Socio-Political and Economic Situation
Yet many of the children of Antigua and Barbuda are still at an economic and socio-political disadvantage compared to their counterparts elsewhere, and meet the criteria for poverty established by the United Nations. Ensuring that these children have the resources and the opportunities they need to lead fulfilling and productive lives is a task incumbent upon not simply the people of the nation but all people that benefit from the tourist economy that currently sustains yet controls the nation.
Paper Undergraduate
Executive Stock Options and Risk-Taking Behavior in Banking
The research supports the literature and confirms that managers in financial institutions do believe that stock options do tend to encourage greater risk-seeking behavior by executives. However, the respondents in this study appear to underestimate the influence that the financial conditions of a firm, the decision context, and the principle-agent dynamics can have on this articulation of managerial risk-seeking behavior. That this is true, is in concert with the behavior model of Wiseman and Gomez-Meijia (1998) and with their suggestion that the theories of stock option incentives are "underdeveloped."
Research Paper Doctorate
Treating Child Abuse Related Posttraumatic Stress and Comorbid Substances Abuse in Adolescents
Treating Child Abuse Related Posttraumatic Stress
Paper Undergraduate
ERP systems and training implementation
Business Operations -- ERP and Training Project Outline
Paper Undergraduate
Mixed Methods and the Study
Modern organizational theory implies that a close consultation with labor and managerial personnel at every level of organization in the completion of key decision-making tasks may demarcate the difference between…
Research Paper Doctorate
E-Commerce and Business Redesign
The e-banking business faces many of the same roadblocks as the rest of the retail sector, when it comes to wide spread usage and acceptance of their e-banking systems. The focus of this research will be to explore the…
Paper Doctorate
Lexical Variation in Intensifiers Newfoundland
The use of words known as 'intensifiers' such as 'so' and 'very' are often studied by linguists, because patterns of use vary widely across genders and demographic groups. The use of intensifiers can be profoundly indicative of social trends as expressed by language. This paper is a literature review of several studies involving intensifiers in Canadian English.