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Manifest Destiny
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Manifest Destiny refers to the nineteenth-century belief that the United States was divinely ordained to expand across the North American continent. The concept appears frequently in American history courses, ethnic studies, and foreign policy seminars because it sits at the intersection of ideology, territorial ambition, and national identity. Its academic appeal lies in how a single coined phrase came to justify sweeping consequences — the annexation of Texas, war with Mexico, displacement of Indigenous peoples, and the absorption of vast new territories — while simultaneously intensifying national debates over slavery and race.

Student papers on this topic approach it from several distinct angles. Some trace the ideology's roots and follow its development through westward expansion and the Mexican War, while others examine how race and class shaped who benefited from territorial growth. Historical case studies appear frequently, including analyses of Lewis and Clark's expeditions and the experiences of borderland communities in the Southwest. Other papers extend the argument forward in time, connecting nineteenth-century expansionism to American foreign policy between 1890 and 1930 and asking whether the impulse toward expansion carried into the twentieth century and beyond.

A strong essay on Manifest Destiny requires a focused thesis that moves beyond simply describing expansion to explaining why it unfolded as it did and who bore its costs. Evidence drawn from policy decisions, territorial conflicts, immigration patterns, and the slavery debate tends to carry the most analytical weight. The most common pitfall is treating Manifest Destiny as an inevitable or neutral process rather than a contested ideology that produced real winners and losers along lines of race, class, and nationality.

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Research Paper Doctorate
History of Econimics
¶ … Industrial Revolution one sees an increase in immigration to the United States. These pull factors can also account for why one sees a trend in migration west within the United States during this time.
Research Paper Doctorate
American Exceptionalism: What Makes the U.S. Unique
When the American electorate re-elected George W. Bush as their President in November 2004, the rest of the world shook its head in collective amazement. They could not understand how someone the world 'loved to hate'…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Response mechanisms and applications
¶ … Monroe Doctrine was issued in 1823 in response to encroaching European colonization in the Americas and also to provide a foundation for American foreign policy. In many ways the doctrine was designed to ensure that…
Paper Doctorate
Nationalism: concepts, history, and contemporary significance
The concept of nationalism asserts that within our respective nation states, we are given over to defining ethnic and linguistic conditions. Hobsbawm argues to the contrary, as the discussion here details. The discussion endorses Hobsbawm's idea that nationalism is a political device and that ethnicity and language are used to justify the power underlying these politics.
Paper Undergraduate
History of Multicultural Counseling Psychology Explained
The United States just like other societies is always considered a rich and complex cultural and ethnic mosaic that is taking place. With such dynamism, Psychologists have made important contributions to our understanding of ethnic and cultural differences; this study shows that but we are still struggling to find ways to cogently discuss and examine ethnicity and culture. This study provides some historical occurrences that have shaped the field of multicultural psychology.
Paper Doctorate
Railroads in the American West
United States became one of the most industrialized nations and sought to grow its industries at an alarming rate. For this purpose, the western part of United States, which had not yet been discovered, was subjected to massive development, economic growth, formation of industries and allowing settlers to move towards the west. Railroads played a significant role in contributing towards the development and urbanization of America's West. The goal of this paper is to analyze the impact of railroads on America's West in the lights of broad and diverse academic resources.
Essay Doctorate
Athens and Sparta -- Was War Inevitable?
Between 500 and 350 BC the area now known as Greece was but a collection of separate and unallied city-states. Today, we often view cultures and political conflict in terms of nations, and take the view that since city-states were geographically close, culture was the same. This, however, was untrue, particularly in the case of the two most powerful and well-known city states of Athens and Sparta. That is not to say that these two entities were completely divergent. Both had some cultural similarities in context with their history, and they cooperated – if distantly, in the years leading up to the Battle of Thermopylae and subsequent defeat of the Persian invaders at Salamis and Plataea, ending Persian aggression for a time.
Essay Doctorate
The Louisiana Purchase and American Territorial Expansion
This paper describes the Louisiana Purchase, and its effects in the short-term for President Jefferson, as well as long-term for the United States. It describes America's relationship with the British and the French, particularly the signing of American war funds to Napoleon Bonaparte and in return doubling the size of the US.
Research Paper Doctorate
Slavery, Statehood, and Sectionalism: Path to Civil War
After the War of Independence, the United States of America stretched no further than the Appalachian Mountains to the West. Feeling fully the vast potential of new lands, Congress drafted a key piece of legislation…
Research Paper Doctorate
Kit Carson: Mountain Man, Guide, and the Navajo Wars
Christopher "Kit" Carson, who was born in 1809 and died in 1868, has become an almost mythic character in American history. He started out as an apprentice to a saddle-maker, but made his way to the West, where he…