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Social Issues
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Social issues are conditions and conflicts within society that affect large groups of people and provoke debate about collective responsibility and policy responses. Students across disciplines — sociology, political science, public health, business, and the humanities — engage with these topics because they sit at the intersection of individual experience and structural power. Courses that assign papers on social issues typically ask students to think critically about how forces like gender, health, and lack of access to resources shape everyday life, and why certain problems persist despite widespread awareness of them.

The papers archived here reflect a broad range of approaches. Some examine specific contested topics such as same-sex marriage or domestic space, using sociological analysis to unpack how social norms are constructed and challenged. Others take a more applied or policy-oriented angle, exploring how social and labor issues operate within supply chain management or how economic, political, and legal factors interact with social conditions in business contexts. Still others approach social issues through cultural and artistic lenses, treating hip-hop, punk ethics, or installation art as sites where broader societal tensions become visible.

A strong essay on a social issue begins with a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad declaration that a problem exists. Evidence drawn from research, case studies, or theoretical frameworks carries more weight than general observation. Grounding claims in specific contexts — a particular community, policy, or cultural moment — sharpens the analysis considerably. The most common pitfall is treating a social issue as self-evidently important without explaining the mechanisms that sustain it or the competing perspectives that complicate easy solutions.

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Paper Doctorate
Great Recession That Started in the U.S.
¶ … Great Recession that started in the U.S. In 2008 and continued by affecting the global economy is often compared to the Great Depression of the 1930s. The complexity of the crisis has determined specialists in the…
Paper Undergraduate
Effects of diversity and democratic characteristics on individual behavior
The objective of this work in writing is to examine the impact that characteristics such as gender, age, sexual orientation and geographical differences have on individual democratic behavior.
Essay Doctorate
Federal Government Has Expanded Through the Years
The role of the federal government increases with new enactments that effect the political, social, and economic structures of American society. During the years between the Civil War and the Civil Rights Era, there are numerous examples and acts that were enacted for the expansion of the federal government authority.
Paper Undergraduate
Regional Economic Integration in Which
In which regional or multilateral trade blocs does Brazil participate?
Research Paper Undergraduate
Topic-specific research questions and frameworks
¶ … Sociology and the family [...] specific topic question regarding a family with a gay son. The sociological issues facing the family are many and varied, just as the sociological issues of modern families are varied…
Research Paper Undergraduate
History and structure of the Catholic Church
The objective of this work is to explore the question of how the Catholic Church relates to the world through its social teachings. This work will describe the basic principles of Catholic Social Teaching and then…
Paper Undergraduate
Paramount Communications
What do you think of Viacom's tactics in making the initial offer to Paramount? The price? The deal structure? The lock-up option? The termination fee? What did the market think of the initial offer?
Paper Doctorate
Organic Food, Urban Farming, and Global Sustainability
We live in a very complex world. Globalization has changed the face of the planet – both in terms of how we communicate, what types of political and social issues we face, and even the choices we make in basic human needs like food. After viewing the movie Urban Roots, I was struck with the issues of sustainability, organic foods, mega-farming, and the issues of urban renewal and community as well. One commentator (the director of Moulin Rouge, in fact), noted that America is in the midst of another war – a food war. The idea of urban farming and people taking personal responsibility for growing food and understanding that there are consequences to eating really changes the way one looks at the products at the local grocery store – what goes into getting them to us, what happens to people and the environment because of our taste for x, y or z, and the overall global consequences to simply eating (
Paper Undergraduate
Learning Journal for Organizational Behavior
This learning journal focuses on organizational behavior in general and how the relevant literature can help human resource professionals better understand how and why people behave the way they do in the workplace to identify opportunities for improvement and to formulate best practices. To develop the learning journal, a series of learning episodes are described in response to various readings from peer-reviewed journal articles concerning employee motivation and its effect on organizational performance that have specific relevance to these issues. These learning episodes are followed by a description of the key inputs and outcomes that resulted and why these are regarded as important to learning as a human resource professional. A feedback and reflection section is followed by a discussion of the outcomes and new learning that took place, and how these can be used as a foundation for further personal growth and areas for additional research. Finally, a summary of the research for the learning journal and important findings are presented in a concluding comments section.
Essay Doctorate
Riders to the Sea John Millington Synge\'s
An analysis of John Millington Synge's "Riders to the Sea." The one act play is analyzed in terms of structure, narrative, and irony. Aspects that are also analyzed include how the play is a tragedy and also how it is a vehicle for social commentary. The play is able to provide insight into the isolated communities of Ireland and the sacrifices that they are forced to make in order to survive.