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Social Policy
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Social policy is the study of how governments and institutions design and implement programs that shape the welfare of individuals and communities. It appears across disciplines including social work, public administration, political science, and human services courses. The field is academically interesting because it sits at the intersection of theory and practice, requiring students to understand not only how policies are created but also how they affect real people across different social and economic conditions. Topics range from health and education to criminal justice and environmental regulation, making social policy relevant to nearly every dimension of public life.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Some take a theoretical orientation, examining frameworks that explain how and why policies emerge or fail. Others are applied and organizational, focusing on how human services agencies operate within policy environments. Several papers engage with specific policy areas such as affirmative action, domestic climate policy, and public transportation subsidies, using case-study and cost-benefit analysis methods. Crime-related theories and psychological frameworks also appear, showing how behavioral explanations inform policy design. Discussion-based and module-style assignments suggest this topic is frequently explored in structured course formats that build understanding incrementally.

A strong essay on social policy needs a clearly scoped thesis that connects a specific policy issue to a measurable social outcome or a coherent theoretical position. Evidence drawn from government data, policy analysis, and real agency examples tends to carry the most weight. Students should be careful to avoid writing in broad generalities about what government "should" do without grounding those claims in concrete evidence or established frameworks, since vague normative arguments weaken policy analysis considerably.

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Essay Doctorate
Housing and Homelessness in Canada in Canada,
There are problems with housing and homelessness throughout Canada. While there are companies and organizations working to lower the number of problems seen in these areas, not enough is being done to combat the entire problem. This paper looks at homelessness in the context of social reform in Western society, and how organizations like the NWT public housing program is making a difference.
Paper High School
Topic to be determined
This paper is about the fault line of immigrants versus established communities, and how this will affect Ontario and British Columbia in terms of economic, social and political changes. Draws on urban development theory and sociology to discuss how immigrant concentration in major cities is transforming Canada's perception of itself.
Essay Doctorate
Young Adults Housing Policy Does the Welfare
The specific purpose of this research is to scrutinize the impacts of the UK Benefits System on the growing demographic of teenage mothers. But in order to track down the list of genuine impacts, one must first understand how the system works. Generally speaking, each credible or qualified group is broadly categorized into whether they are taxable or non-taxable. That is to say, those groups of deserving people such as the sick or the low income groups are entitled to the various bonuses they receive, provided that they fulfill a certain taxation criteria. {Inland Revenue, 2001}The specific purpose of this research is to scrutinize the impacts of the UK Benefits System on the growing demographic of teenage mothers. But in order to track down the list of genuine impacts, one must first understand how the system works. Generally speaking, each credible or qualified group is broadly categorized into whether they are taxable or non-taxable. That is to say, those groups of deserving people such as the sick or the low income groups are entitled to the various bonuses they receive, provided that they fulfill a certain taxation criteria. {Inland Revenue, 2001}
Essay Doctorate
Evolution of historiography on Jim Crow segregation in the American South
Vann Woodward and Jim Crow Evaluating the impact of Reconstruction social policy on blacks is more controversial due to the issue of segregation. Until the publication of C. Vann Woodward Strange Career of Jim Crow in 1955, the traditional view was that after the gains of Reconstruction, Conservative Democrats clamped down on the blacks by instituting an extensive system of segregation and disfranchisement (Woodward, 1974). Woodward, however, argued that there was a period of fluidity in race relations between the end of Reconstruction and the 1890s. Woodward concentrated on de jure segregation rather than de facto segregation, in part because he was influenced by the Brown v. Board of Education decision ( 1954) and the growing agitation over desegregation. In still another example of current affairs influencing a historian's viewpoint, Woodward wanted to show that segregation was not an irrevocable folkway of Southern life, but actually a rather recent innovation. Despite attacks from a number of scholars who pointed to the existence of segregation during the antebellum period in both the North and South, and, most pointedly, even during Reconstruction, Woodward's view was widely accepted. Woodward's critics were limited by their own desire to make history conform to their expectations and as a result simply searched for proof that segregation represented the norm in Southern life (Dailey, et al 2000). As a result their work lacked a dynamic approach which would emphasize process (Rabinowitz, 1978).
Essay Doctorate
Comparative social policies in post-communist, Southeast Asian, and Latin American societies
Post-communism is a term that is used to define the period during which economic and political transformation took place in some countries of Asia, Latin America and Europe, which were formerly communist states. The new governments of these countries aimed to create capitalist economies that were free market-oriented. The countries that have made a transition from being solely communist to capitalist, or at least a combination of two, are referred to as the post-communist nations (Easter, 2012). Papua New Guinea and Cuba are the two post-communist countries that will be the main topic of discussion of this paper.
Paper Undergraduate
Human resource management concepts and practices
Human Resource Management Introduction "America's possibilities are limitless, for we possess all the qualities that this world without boundaries demands: youth and drive; diversity and openness; an endless capacity for risk and a gift for reinvention. My fellow Americans, we are made for this moment, and we will seize it – so long as we seize it together…" (President Barack Obama, Inaugural Address, 1/21/2013). The job of a human relations manager in the 21st century goes well beyond hiring and training staff. An important part of an HR manager's duties includes working towards the creation of a diversified employee workforce. This paper echoes part of what President Obama asserted: to achieve success the U.S. will depend on "diversity and openness." The diversity of America's workplace in part depends on the role of women, and this paper delves into that issue and references the available literature. In fact an article in USA Today (Petrecca, 2011) points to the fact that women are being recruited to provide executive leadership in some of America's biggest corporations – but they still lag far behind in executive opportunities.