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Social Injustice
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Social injustice refers to the unequal distribution of rights, resources, and opportunities across groups defined by race, class, gender, and other social categories. It appears across disciplines including sociology, political science, literature, religious studies, and social work, making it one of the most broadly examined topics in academic writing. Its academic interest lies in the tension between structural forces and individual experience — students must grapple with how laws, institutions, and cultural norms produce and sustain inequality. Works and frameworks drawn from thinkers like Marx, Weber, and Durkheim provide theoretical grounding, while literary texts such as The Emperor Jones and poetry like Weldon Kees's "For My Daughter" illustrate how injustice is expressed and resisted through culture.

Student papers on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some engage sociological theory directly, comparing how Marx, Weber, Durkheim, and Mosca explain inequality. Others focus on specific historical struggles such as women's suffrage or concrete policy problems like college tuition increases and environmental racism, as seen in analyses of Dumping in Dixie. Religious and literary analysis also appears prominently, with papers examining Old Testament prophets, the Book of Job, and the relationship between idolatry, ritualism, and social injustice. Applied approaches address programs like gang prevention initiatives and the frameworks used in social work practice.

A strong essay on social injustice needs a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad claim that injustice exists. Evidence carries the most weight when it connects systemic causes — such as discriminatory laws or institutional barriers — to specific, documented effects on communities. The most common pitfall is conflating description with analysis; simply cataloguing examples of inequality is not enough without explaining the mechanisms that produce and sustain it.

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Paper Doctorate
American photography: a century of images
Today, the world is inundated with photographs on billboards, in the print media, on television, and online. Everywhere one turns, there are photographs. It is difficult, therefore, to imagine what it was like when…
Paper Undergraduate
Nutrition and weight status in obesity
Though the number of people with diabetes is rising to epidemic proportions across the nation. It is interesting to note that there is little evidence that the elderly women in Maryland are faced with similar mortality…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Harlem During 1920-1960 the United
The United States is considered for centuries now the "land of all opportunities." Throughout time, it has attracted millions of people from around the world in search for a better future and for new ground for personal…
Essay Doctorate
Symbol in Frost, Welty Symbol of Journey
This paper analyzes the symbol of the Journey in Robert Frost's "Road Not Taken" and Eudora Welty's "A Worn Path" in terms of form, content, style and theme. Though the two works are comparable in terms of symbol, they contrast in terms of movement, direction and intention. Welty's story transcends, Frost's poem satirizes.
Paper Undergraduate
Global inequality in South Africa
South Africa is a large nation comprising the southern tip of the African continent. Its capital city is Pretoria, but Johannesburg and Cape Town both have larger populations. The region is rich in natural resources…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Josip Broz Tito (1892-1980) Few
Few people have impacted the history of their country in such a profound way as Josip Broz Tito of Yugoslavia. He was a larger than life figure who organized the Communist Party in Yugoslavia; was in the forefront of…
Essay Doctorate
Ethics in Criminal Justice: The Police Function
This article examines the issue of ethics within the criminal justice system, which is one of the most controversial issues within the field. The paper is divided into two major segments with the first one explaining the slippery slope hypothesis and its relationship to gratuities. The second section discusses three theories regarding public corruption i.e. society-at-large, structural or affiliation, and rotten apple hypotheses.
Paper High School
Karl Marx's theory of social class and critical evaluation
Karl Marx & Class Issues Introduction Karl Marx is notorious for having promoted communism in the late 18th and early 19th centuries, but moreover, throughout the 20th century and into the 21st century Marx is respected as an economist, sociologist, philosopher and author. His views are rarely embraced in the neo-liberal community (that promotes free-market capitalism, globalization and the power of the private sector) but his scholarship is generally included in economics and sociological studies. This paper presents his views on class, and responses to those views from other scholars.
Paper Undergraduate
Narrative Voice in Old Goriot,
In Oliver Twist, the narrator assumes the omniscient role of the one who is able to tell the story of o boy from a detached yet comprehensive position. The narrator clearly states his presence from the first Chapter by…
Paper Undergraduate
Tituba, Black Witch of Salem
What Does Conde Think of Western Civilization Consist of?