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Political Science
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Political science is the systematic study of government, power, and political behavior, examining how institutions are structured, how decisions are made, and how authority is exercised over citizens and societies. It appears across undergraduate and graduate curricula in courses ranging from American government and constitutional law to comparative politics and political theory. The field is academically rich because it sits at the intersection of history, philosophy, sociology, and law, requiring students to analyze not only how governments function but why they take the forms they do. Works like James Scott's Domination and the Arts of Resistance and foundational texts on conservatism, Congress, and constitutional history give students concrete frameworks for thinking about power relationships between governing bodies and the people they represent.

Student papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Some are historically grounded, examining events such as the Constitutional Convention or specific Supreme Court dockets to understand how legal and political structures evolved. Others are comparative, analyzing Latin American countries to assess democratic development, governance, and political power. Still others engage with political theory and thinkers such as Machiavelli, or apply frameworks from theorists like Domhoff, Dahl, and Gaventa to evaluate how power is distributed across American society. Policy-focused and text-based analyses, including readings from American government textbooks and works like Upton Sinclair's The Jungle, round out the range of approaches.

A strong political science essay begins with a precise, arguable thesis rather than a broad statement about government or society. Evidence drawn from primary sources, legislative records, court decisions, or theoretical texts carries the most analytical weight. The most common pitfall is treating political outcomes as inevitable rather than explaining the specific conditions, actors, and power dynamics that produced them.

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Paper Doctorate
Friendship in the Polis
Aristotle defined three friendships in his Nichomachean Ethics, a collection of lecture notes on morality and ethics. Aside from the more traditional friendships based on love and shared interests, Aristotle described like-minded citizens as friends of utility within the scope of a political community. These friendships constitute an essential component of society's striving for an ultimate moral goal, which the political community also defines. This essay examines how this philosophy of political friendship plays out in a contemporary America.
Case Study Undergraduate
Securities Regulation of Nonprofit Organizations
SECURITIES REGULARIZATIONS IN NON PROFIT ORGANIZATIONS 1. INTRODUCTION The ensuring of the fact that an organization is working as per regulations and is following the code of conduct, while keeping the interest of the public first, are matters which are becoming more and more complicated with the passage of time. Therefore, it can be said with some emphasis, that today one of the most basic issues of many organizations is the issue of Transparency. Transparency has been defined as being "characterized by visibility of accessibility of information concerning business practices". More and more companies are now realizing that in the time and age in which we live, living with these models of ethics is compulsory, if they want to have credibility in the general public.
Paper Doctorate
Environmentalist From the Very Beginning of My
This is a research paper about environment and the extent to which managers influence the professional development of their employees in the IT industry. This is a research paper about environment and the extent to which managers influence the professional development of their employees in the IT industry. This is a research paper about environment and the extent to which managers influence the professional development of their employees in the IT industry. This is a research paper about environment and the extent to which managers influence the professional development of their employees in the IT industry.
Research Paper Doctorate
Passage of Proposition 209
The preponderance of evidence suggests that the passage of Proposition #209 had no significant impact on government or business..." In California, is likely two-thirds true, albeit it's difficult to quantify given the…
Paper Doctorate
Historical psychology: concepts, methods, and applications
The science of Psychology has evolved over time and certain studies have been instrumental in that evolution. Two of the more famous studies that have revolutionized the field were the Rorschach inkblot study of 1942,…
Paper Doctorate
Flaubert's Bouvard and Pécuchet: Irony, Knowledge, and Satire
Gustave Flaubert's posthumously-published novel Bouvard and Pecuchet is a sustained exercise in irony: to some extent this irony can be interpreted as the distance between theory and practice.
Paper Undergraduate
T Boone Pickins: My Case for Reagan 1984
During the 1980 presidential campaign Republican Ronald Reagan suggested that Americans ask themselves whether or not they better off financially than they were four years earlier, at the beginning of President Jimmy…
Paper Undergraduate
Institutional Decay and Renovation
In "The Quiet Coup," Simon Johnson draws remarkable and shocking parallels between the United States and emerging market economies. The current monetary and debt crisis in the United States bears resemblance to similar…
Research Paper Doctorate
Benefit of Virtue in Liberalism
For several decades, many politicians and professors have been promoting the belief that the fate of liberal democracy in America is correlated with the quality of citizens' character (Berkowitz, 1999).
Paper Undergraduate
Organizational Health Educational Institutions Generally Approach Organizational
Conventional wisdom and crowd-sourcing have led to a uniform approach to educational preparation that strongly emphasizes the STEM-based skillsets. The pressure to yield ever higher performance scores in engineering, mathematics, science, and technology regardless of students' intentions for college majors and courses of study has led to a growing body of discouraged students. The talents of these students may lie in areas outside of STEM majors. In much the same way that Marcus Buckingham-in his research on managerial effectiveness for the Gallup organization—argues that managers must develop workers' strengths rather than focusing on the weaknesses, the American educational system must establish performance standards that mesh with the diversity of talents and interests of students who are attending or hope to attend institutions of higher education. The first step in this direction is to ensure that robust workplace-based instruction is available to students through collaborative arrangements with employers and apprenticeship programs. The efficiency of this process—which borrows from inventory control just-in-time principles—will help to ensure that training is current and reflects true employment skill demands.