Essay Topic Hub

Terrorism
Essays

2,844+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

2,844 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Terrorism is a subject examined across criminal justice, political science, international relations, homeland security, and public policy courses. It sits at the intersection of law, government authority, and political violence, making it analytically rich and genuinely contested. Part of what makes it academically interesting is that defining terrorism itself is disputed — governments, scholars, and legal systems often apply different standards to distinguish terrorist acts from other forms of political violence or organized crime. That definitional tension shapes nearly every subsequent argument about how states should respond to terrorist groups and their activities.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Some take a policy and legal angle, examining counterterrorism legislation, the Patriot Act, and Fourth Amendment concerns raised by counterterrorism law. Others adopt a regional or historical focus, tracing the roots of terrorist activity in areas such as the Middle East or Yemen and analyzing effects on U.S. interests. Additional papers approach terrorism through security and preparedness frameworks, covering interagency disaster response, homeland security structures, maritime piracy, and biological weapon detection. Comparative work also appears, with papers contrasting definitions of terrorism or measuring modern terrorist activity against earlier models such as Latin American urban political violence.

A strong essay on terrorism begins with a clearly scoped thesis — broad claims about "all terrorism" rarely hold up under scrutiny, so anchoring the argument in a specific group, region, policy, or time period produces sharper analysis. Evidence drawn from legal statutes, government reports, documented attacks, and established case studies carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is conflating description with analysis; cataloguing terrorist acts without connecting them to a driving argument leaves the essay without a defensible claim.

2,844 papers
Sort by:
Essay Doctorate
Ethical decision making in criminal justice and private security
Ethical Decision-Making in Criminal Justice
Essay Doctorate
Security versus civil liberties in the Patriot Act
Arguments for and against the Patriot Act
Paper Undergraduate
Israel's Security Threats, Government, and Counterterrorism
Israel is a young nation, developed following WWII, when Britain withdrew from Palestine and the United Nations partitioned a portion of it for the resettlement of displaced Jews following the war.
Paper Undergraduate
Consumer Perceptions Toward Personal Behavior
Toward Personal Behavior Related To Playing Online Games
Research Paper Undergraduate
Hamas Organization Is the Most
Hamas organization is the most influential Islamism movement on Palestinian territories. The word "hamas" means zeal and the name of the organization is acronym for Harakat al-Mugawima al-Islamiyya.
Paper Undergraduate
Homeland Security Department of Homeland
Since President Bush established the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) in 2003, it has undergone constant change in scope, composition, and jurisdiction. (It had been the White House Office of Homeland Security…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Phoenix Program Lessons to Iraq
It is not at all unusual to hear popular comparisons made between the Vietnam War and the current war in Iraq and though most experts see only a casual relationship still others see a comparison that is not only valid…
Paper High School
Cultural and Political Systems Terrorism
Terrorism and Relativism Do you agree 'that one country's terrorist is another country's freedom fighter'? Do you think it is right to donate millions / billions of dollars to the families that lost loved ones in the…
Research Paper Doctorate
Terrorism: An Introduction and Refutation
Terrorism: An Introduction and Refutation of White's Urban Model With Contemporary Islamic Paradigms
Research Paper Undergraduate
Extraordinary rendition: practices and legal implications
On September 6, 2006, President Bush openly admitted that the CIA, under his authorization, had been operating secret detention centers at sites abroad for the previous five years (Elsea & Kim, 2007).