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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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Thesis Masters
The war in Afghanistan
After the terrorist group al Qaeda attacked the United States on September 11, 2001, the American military was sent to Afghanistan to attack the Taliban, and destroy their governing position.
Paper Undergraduate
Middle Eastern Women the Middle
The Middle East is a geographical region in Southwest Asia and Northeast Africa (Sluglett 2008). It consists of the countries of Bahrain, Cyprus, Iran, Iraq, Israel, Jordan, Kuwait, Lebanon, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia,…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Global war on terrorism: causes, responses, and impacts
Historical depictions of warfare often lead one to think that war, especially as conducted on European soil, was an event of rules and engagement and strategy. Conducting war has been described as an "art." Famous men…
Paper Undergraduate
American foreign security policies and their strategic implications
What are the key points -- the core interests and goals -- of U.S. foreign policy as regards security? The U.S. foreign policy has core interests in containing terrorism, limiting the production and threats associated…
Paper Undergraduate
Heroin NYC New York City
New York City and Heroin: A Cultural Addiction
Paper Undergraduate
Morally There Is No Difference
Morally There Is No Difference Between Killing Civilians With Bombs From Military Aircraft and Blowing Them Up With Bombs
Research Paper Undergraduate
Terrorism Has Become the Bane
Terrorism has become the bane of our time and terrorists have undermined the confidence and the security of people all over the world. Particularly, the aftermath of September 11 has created a constant fear among people…
Paper Masters
Capital punishment and the church's historical perspectives
¶ … death penalty is one of the few social issues where the United States's political position more closely resembles that of Uganda, Iraq, and Pakistan than that of Britain and most European nations.
Essay Doctorate
Drug Wars a Thin, Bloody Line Borders
This paper examines the recent drug-related violence on the U.S.-Mexican border and the attempts to combat it.
Paper Undergraduate
Social Darwinism and its historical impact
Social Darwinism is a controversial theory first expounded by Herbert Spencer. In many ways, social Darwinism is an elitist concept that justifies the morally corrupt decisions made by the rich and powerful.