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Pakistan
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Pakistan occupies a central place in political science, international relations, history, and regional studies courses. As a nuclear-armed state situated at the intersection of South Asia, Central Asia, and the Middle East, it presents students with questions about governance, state power, religious identity, and regional conflict. The country's relationship with neighboring India, its role in Afghan affairs, and the tension between Islam and democratic institutions give it a complexity that instructors across multiple disciplines find academically productive to assign.

Papers on this topic approach Pakistan from several distinct angles. Security-focused essays examine military intervention, the role of agencies like the ISI, and comparisons between U.S. involvement in Afghanistan and Pakistan. Historical treatments address foundational conflicts such as the First Kashmir War of 1947–1948 and the broader Indo-Pakistani dispute over Kashmir. Other papers take up ideological questions, particularly whether Islamic governance and democracy can coexist within Pakistan's political system. Some essays shift toward economic and social dimensions, exploring topics like career orientation among bank managers in the public and private sectors.

A strong essay on Pakistan benefits from a clearly bounded thesis — choosing one dimension, such as civil-military relations, regional security, or political Islam, rather than attempting to cover the country broadly. Evidence drawn from specific policy decisions, historical events, and documented government actions tends to carry more weight than general characterizations. The most common pitfall is treating Pakistan purely as a backdrop to other subjects, such as U.S. foreign policy or Afghan conflict, without engaging substantively with Pakistan's own internal dynamics and political history.

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Paper Masters
alms giving in islam
Zakat is compulsory in some countries but voluntary in most. To that end, the Public Interest Research Advocacy Center (PIRAC) (2005) discovered that in Indonesia at least the highest amount of donations proceed from the educated professional class. To that end, and in order to trace the habits of giving of this class, the following essay mentions an interesting study that was conducted in Indonesia regarding the giving habits of professors and lecturers in an Islamic university. It proceeds to details the results of that study and concludes by suggesting that the study would be effectively paralleled by a corollary one on an institution in America – or in some other Western country that has a sizable Islamic population. The essay finally concludes by pointing out the contributions of such a study to Islamic research on the subject of zakat.
Research Paper Undergraduate
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Child labor is condemned across the globe, but is it fair for a multinational to terminate relationships with suppliers when incidents arise regarding the use of child workers, regardless of the implications to the…
Research Paper Undergraduate
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American Military Security: The Dangers of Using Hard Power Alone
Paper Undergraduate
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Research Paper Undergraduate
Non-Profit Disaster Mitigation Organization. Specifically,
¶ … non-profit disaster mitigation organization. Specifically, it will analyze the American Red Cross, including the mission of the organization, and its involvement in recent disasters, and funding issues.
Paper Undergraduate
Consumerism Divergence and Convergence
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Research Paper Undergraduate
Cups of Tea Analysis Three
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Research Paper Undergraduate
Catholicism and Islam: A Comparison/Contrast
As a major branch of Christianity, Roman Catholicism dates back to around 312 A.D. when the Roman Emperor Constantine converted to Christianity and gave up all of his Roman pagan beliefs based on polytheism or the…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Islam the Main Argument Set
The main argument set forth by Edward Said in "The Clash of Definitions" has much to do with countering the conclusions of political scientist Samuel P. Huntington whose "Clash of Civilizations" maintains that cultural…