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Prohibition
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Prohibition refers to the legal ban on the manufacture, sale, and distribution of alcohol in America, and it stands as one of the most consequential policy experiments in United States history. Students most commonly encounter this topic in history, political science, and social studies courses, where it serves as a lens for examining how government attempts to regulate personal behavior. Its academic appeal lies in the tension it exposes between moral reform movements, government authority, and individual freedom — tensions that remain relevant whenever societies debate drug policy or public health legislation today.

The papers archived on this topic take several distinct approaches. Some focus on the 1920s directly, examining the pivotal social and economic role Prohibition played during the Roaring Twenties, including the rise of black markets and organized crime. Others take a comparative or policy-oriented angle, drawing parallels between alcohol prohibition and contemporary debates over marijuana legalization, asking why governments choose to criminalize certain substances. A smaller number of papers examine specific social actors, including women's roles in the prohibition movement, labor organizations, and advocacy groups that shaped public opinion around substance regulation.

A strong essay on Prohibition establishes a focused, arguable thesis rather than simply narrating events. Evidence drawn from primary source documents — government records, contemporary accounts, or advocacy literature — carries particular weight and demonstrates genuine historical engagement. Secondary sources help contextualize causes and consequences. The most common pitfall is treating Prohibition as an isolated failure rather than analyzing it within the broader political and social climate of America at the time, which weakens the argument's depth and historical credibility.

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Essay Undergraduate
Argument and persuasion in academic discourse
This is a five-page argumentative or persuasive paper on the failure of the war on drugs. The war on drugs has failed miserably. Statistics are used to prove this point and to draw attention to the financial and social costs of the war on drugs. The war on drugs is like the prohibition of alcohol, which also failed. It is high time that the world woke up to the reality that the war on drugs cannot be won.
Paper Undergraduate
Register of Language, Affirmation, and Prohibition Register
Register of language defines the way native speakers divide the way they speak in different social settings. It spans over a spectrum beginning in the most casual of settings all the way into the most careful behavior…
Paper Doctorate
Ways of Looking at America and Controversial Issue
According to historian Frederick Turner, America is by nature a 'pioneering' nation. It is distinctly different in its worldview from Europe, given that it has been founded upon the ideals of newness, expansiveness, and…
Paper Undergraduate
Informed Consent and Ethics
Patients are entitled and must be informed of all possible medical procedures that they are likely to undergo in a clinical setting. Complications stemming from patient-counselor interactions remain a key source of ethical violations and complaints. Informed consent is a major issue with a direct bearing on the counselor-patient relationship. some patients tend to decline to be evaluated although they are likely to be beneficiaries of neuropsychological consultations. However, patients have the absolute right of exercising this prerogative with the assumption that they have the intact capacity to make decisions and assessments are not mandatory
Paper Doctorate
Arguing for the Legalization of Marijuana in Washington State
¶ … Legalization of Marijuana in Washington State
Paper Doctorate
Canon law: history, principles, and applications
The issue of whether marriage must always precede ordination and whether priests and widowhood may be allowed to remarry after widowhood or divorce was one of the topics of discussion at the revolutionary 1923 Pan-Orthodox Congress, which aimed to produce reform-oriented results that would allow the Orthodox Church to be better adapted to the new realities of the world in the period after World War I. On both issues, beyond any economic or social arguments, the discussion should always revert back to the Scriptures and to what the Scriptures say about these elements. For example, the Congress agreed that the Scriptures allow for marriage after ordination (or, in fact, that there is nothing in the Scriptures that prohibits that, meaning, by extrapolation and law principle, that whatever is not prohibited, is considered to be in line with the canonical law).
Research Paper Doctorate
Engel v. Vitale 1962
Supreme Court Case-- Engel v. Vitale. Engel v. Vitale, 370 U.S. 421 (1962) [Establishment of Religion - Prayer in Public Schools].
Research Paper Doctorate
Close Is Too Close: What Is Wrong
This paper outlines incest as a social taboo with reference to the Jewish, Native American, and Malagasy cultures and identifies what is wrong with the practice of incest. It has 7 sources.
Paper Doctorate
Telephone Conversation by Soyinka
In the 1500's, Europe was a very dirty place, and fleas were a major problem. It was, in fact, fleas that were responsible for the Black Death, or Plague, that had ravaged Europe since the 1300's.
Paper Doctorate
Airport security law and regulatory frameworks
This paper examines airport security with regards to the increase in global security threats that have made airports to become vulnerable to security issues. The paper discusses The Airport Security Act of 2013 with regards to how it was developed in the aftermath of the shooting incident at Los Angeles International Airport. The discussion also includes an evaluation of the potential impact of the legislation on enhancing airport security if enacted into law.