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Migration
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Migration, as a historical subject, examines the large-scale movement of peoples across regions and borders and the forces that drive those movements. It appears in courses covering world history, social history, economic history, and cultural studies, often because it sits at the intersection of political change, economic pressure, and cultural transformation. What makes migration academically compelling is the way it connects individual experience to broad structural forces — questions of population movement, development, and national identity are rarely separable from the deeper currents of history shaping any given era.

The papers archived on this subject approach migration from several distinct angles. Some take a historical and comparative view, examining how migration and trade functioned across empires such as the Holy Roman Empire and the Byzantine Empire. Others focus on the cultural consequences of movement, analyzing processes like cultural assimilation, the emergence of multicultural societies, and the development of distinct dialects and linguistic patterns. Several papers engage with westward expansion and settlement as a domestic migration story, while others evaluate policy-oriented questions about whether migration produces net positive outcomes for receiving countries and their populations.

A strong essay on migration in a history context requires a clearly scoped thesis that specifies a time period, a population, and a direction of causation — for instance, whether economic development drives migration or migration drives development. Evidence drawn from population data, policy records, and cultural analysis tends to carry the most weight. A common pitfall is treating migration as a uniform phenomenon; the strongest essays distinguish carefully between voluntary movement, forced displacement, and the varied ways different groups experienced settlement and assimilation.

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Essay Doctorate
Native Americans in major newspapers, 1968-1980
This paper is on Native Americans. . In 1830, the Indian Removal Act was passed by the U.S. Congress that relocated the Native Americans from their homelands to states established on the west of the Mississippi River. This relocation was to accommodate the growing European-American population. This led to a great deal of resistance from the Native Americans with a series of uprisings, those including the American Civil war and the subsequent Indian Wars that were fought up to 1890's before the U.S. government forced them to abandon in exchange for a number of treaties signed and land recessions given.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Spanglish in Puerto Rican NYC
The manner in which language changes when it comes into contact with a linguistically different language is frequently thought of as both a necessary function of transition as well as a corruption of both languages.
Paper Undergraduate
Cancun, Mexico: geographic and cultural overview
Physical and Cultural Geography of Cancun, Mexico
Paper Doctorate
Zahi Hawass and the Tutankhamun family project
Zahi Hawass was born May 28, 1947 in Al-Ubaydiyah, near Damietta in the north-eastern Nile Delta. At fifteen years old, Hawass commenced law studies at the University of Alexandria but soon shifted his primary area of…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Economic impact of legal and illegal immigrants on the United States
The United States is a nation of immigrants. This is undisputed. But what has been the impact of migration on the U.S. economy? Are there applicable the same trends that were applicable in the 1980s when an important…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Capitalism and Class Ecdriesbaugh Capitalism
Marx and Engels stated, "The class, which is the ruling material force of society, is at the same time its ruling intellectual force. The class which has the means of material production at its disposal has control at…
Essay Doctorate
Gang subculture: origins, history, activities, and theoretical explanations
The paper will briefly explore the definition of gangs, the history of gangs, the effects of them both locally & globally, as well as the reactions from the communities in which they gangs reside and conduct their activities. Gangs exist firmly as a distinctive subculture. There are theories such as cultural deviance theory, strain theory, and social control theory that offer frameworks in which professionals and scholars may consider and/or explain the formation of gangs. The paper will attempt to reference and/or use these such theories as part of the examination and articulation of gangs as a subculture.
Paper Undergraduate
Yoruba\'s Influence on Modern-Day Cultures
The Yoruba people make up one of the largest ethnic groups in west Africa. Yoruba is also name of the associated of a religion and language of the people living on the west coast of Africa.
Essay Doctorate
Symbiotic relationships between affluent and low-income urban neighborhoods
One the island of Manhattan, each neighborhood contains a distinct demographic makeup and the character of a neighborhood can change almost by the block. To see how the relationship between these highly disparate…
Paper High School
Art Appreciation: Lange, Neshat, and Sacred Art Traditions
Dorothea Lange's Migrant Mother, Nipomo, California (1936)