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Normative
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Normative inquiry appears across a wide range of academic disciplines, from political science and criminology to psychology, accounting, and education. At its core, a normative approach asks what ought to be the case — what standards, values, or rules should guide behavior, policy, or institutions — rather than simply describing what is. This makes it a productive framework for courses that require students to evaluate social structures, professional practices, or governmental decisions against some ethical or theoretical benchmark. Papers drawing on normative reasoning often engage with questions of justice, human rights, cultural relativism, and the proper role of institutions in shaping individual behavior.

The archived papers on this topic take a variety of approaches. Some are comparative, setting normative theory against positive or empirical frameworks — as seen in work contrasting normative and positive accounting theory. Others are applied, using needs assessment models or policy theory dimensions to evaluate real-world programs and decisions. Still others draw on sociological and psychological theories, including examinations of anomie, crime causation, and gerontology, to assess how normative standards shape individual and group outcomes. Educational settings, including debates over online versus traditional teaching, also appear as contexts where normative judgments about quality and access come into focus.

A strong essay on a normative topic requires a clearly scoped thesis that takes a defensible position rather than merely summarizing competing views. Evidence drawn from theoretical frameworks, empirical research, and policy analysis tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is conflating normative and descriptive claims — asserting what people do when the argument requires explaining what they should do and why.

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Thesis Undergraduate
Prison overcrowding and its impact on the criminal justice system for African Americans
The fact that many American prisons (both private and state-run) are terribly overcrowded has a significantly negative impact on the African American community. This paper delves into the ways in which overcrowding impacts black families and black communities. The paper also delves into stereotypes, racism, oppression of minorities, and the racist legislation that was enacted during the Reagan administration that targeted black men - but was promoted under the guise of cracking down on drugs in the cities.
Paper Undergraduate
Spinoza\'s Argument Against the Doctrine
This paper discusses Spinoza's argument against the doctrine of final causation. Spinoza's position is that the doctrine of final causation is based in ignorance about the nature of an infinite God and a lack of understanding about cause and effect. The author suggests that there are problems in Spinoza's reasoning, but ultimately agrees with his conclusions about final causation.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Divorce in Minority Families Divorce
Divorce has been a hot topic as well as the effects that divorce has in various family dynamics especially across ethnic boundaries. However, Studies of divorce among ethnically heterogeneous couples was rare in 1996.
Paper Undergraduate
Organizational change and development
Introduction The critical enterprise consists, ideally, of three aspects: (1) explanation and critique of current systems and the historical currents that have given rise to them, (2) an alternative vision of organizations and society that resolves the problems and oppressions in the current systems, and (3) an account of how one moves from the current system to the envisioned one, either naturally or through planned change. Critical research on organizations has generally been weakest in terms of this third aspect. No doubt this is due, in large part, to the Sisyphean tasks of explaining the subtle and often hidden means of control that pre- serve current systems and going beyond them to en- vision alternatives that are exceptionally difficult to distill and express in terms that make them plausible to most readers. Living in a world dominated by current ideologies and disciplinary practices, many people experience difficulty understanding that there are alternatives, much less accepting them as plausible and attainable. Having devoted extensive labor to developing these two aspects, critical scholars have tended to pay less attention to explaining how one transforms the organization or the process by which transformation takes place.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Drug classification and effects
Differentiate between androgenic and anabolic effects of the male sex hormone testosterone.
Paper Doctorate
Men and Adolescence Anthropological Inquiry
Anthropological inquiry into male-female relations has somewhat evolved around debates concerning sexual inequality. Gender roles are complex and clearly vary by culture and time-period, and are often misunderstood…
Paper Masters
Racism in British Columbia
From a sociological standpoint, modern racism in Canada is both covert and overt and tends to follow the path of ethnocentrism rather that the lesser popular version of over racism. Ethnocentrism and racism are never monopolized by one country or another – East or West, North or South, ethnocentrism is characteristic of much of human history. In the 10,000 years of recorded history, in fact, history is written by one group assuming its own superiority over others – viewing the other as suspicious and anything outside (customs, culture, language, etc.) with suspicion and hostility, often condemnation.
Research Paper Doctorate
Nellie McClung: Canadian feminist and social reformer
Many women and children live in substandard and marginal conditions in many parts of the world and they need a voice to transmit those conditions and voting power to correct those conditions.
Paper Undergraduate
Security and human rights: balancing collective protection with individual liberty
In the inherently volatile arena of national security concerns in regard to terrorism, it may be asserted that no issue generates greater controversy than that of state-sanctioned torture.
Essay Doctorate
Theoretical Approaches to Ethics. Normative Ethical Theory
Normative ethics is the descriptor that is applied to the entire caliber of a certain perspective of ethics that has various sub-categories to it. As general definition, normative ethics is the term given to the moral…