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Torture
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Torture sits at the intersection of government policy, ethics, and international law, making it a subject of serious academic inquiry across political science, philosophy, and public policy courses. It raises fundamental questions about state power, human dignity, and the limits of authority. Students are frequently asked to engage with the practice from multiple disciplinary angles, including utilitarian cost-benefit reasoning, deontological frameworks such as those associated with Kant, and human rights law. The work of Alfred W. McCoy, whose book A Question of Torture appears directly in student paper topics, provides a historically grounded examination of how governments have authorized and institutionalized coercive interrogation practices.

The papers written on this topic reflect a range of analytical approaches. Many take a direct argumentative stance, weighing whether torture can ever be justified on security grounds or whether it constitutes an absolute violation of human rights. Others focus on specific case studies, such as the treatment of gay and lesbian individuals in Iraq and the international human rights violations that follow. Policy-oriented essays examine how governments legislate around torture, while philosophy papers apply ethical theories to interrogation scenarios, particularly around the extraction of information under duress.

A strong essay on torture requires a clearly scoped thesis that commits to a position rather than simply surveying both sides. Evidence drawn from legal frameworks, documented cases, and established ethical theory carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is conflating the abstract moral debate with practical policy without acknowledging that these operate under different standards of justification — keeping them analytically distinct strengthens the overall argument.

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Paper Doctorate
Popular Culture Affects Children Today
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Saddam Hussein's greed and totalitarian quest for power
Saddam Hussein's reign as one of the most powerful leaders in the Middle Eastern region has been, over the years, riddled with both criticism and support. These criticisms and expressions of support has been signified…
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The intelligence community reform and its effects on national security
Since the 911 terrorist attacks, most people assumed the U.S. intelligence community was undergoing a series of different reforms, to help gather and more effectively utilize intelligence.
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Complaint procedures under human rights treaties and their impact on special rapporteurs
The system of the protection of human rights represents one of the most important mechanisms the international society has successfully set in place following the Second World War. This success is largely due to the…
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Benito Cereno a New Deception: Comparing Benito
A New Deception: Comparing Benito Cereno to the Modern World
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CIA Secrecy, Ethics, and Government Oversight
Any agency which works in secret can behave in a scandalous manner, and the CIA is no exception to this rule." This paper will analyze this statement on two grounds: is it true that agencies which act in secret behave…
Research Paper Undergraduate
World War II propaganda posters from the Office of War Information
WWII Propaganda Posters: Soldiers without Guns
Research Paper Undergraduate
Situational factors in the Abu Ghraib abuse scandal
In 2005, a 22-year-old female reservist who had been activated to service in Operation Enduring Freedom, Lynndie England, admitted to seven charges of infraction and breaking of the United States Military's rules for…
Paper Doctorate
Culture and Morality. In Other
Abstract: Order # A 2060087: Morality and Culture The focus of this paper is to determine the relationship between morality and culture. In other words it deals with the question: Is morality relative to culture? Proponents of so called "cultural relativism", sometimes also called "moral relativism" or "ethical relativism" argue that different cultures obtain varying moral codes. If there is no transcendent moral or ethical standard, then often culture arguably seems to become the ethical norm for determining whether an action is right or wrong (see Anderson: 1). Culture and cultural dimensions are considered the collective horizon representing a specific social reality. American anthropologist and cultural relativist Ruth Benedict in Patterns of Culture (1934) said: "Morality differs in every society and is a convenient term for socially approved habits". The paper shows that "cultural relativism" - though it has some strong arguments - is a concept which is false because of its many shortcomings. It will show that the notion cannot be lived out consistently. The strongest discrepancy between the concept and reality is that there are universal moral standards that can exist even if some practices and beliefs vary from one culture to another.
Essay Doctorate
Cyberbullying and Cyberstalking: Dangers and Consequences
Cyberbullying is a new threat to children where they can be harassed by way of technology such as social media, instant messaging or cell phone texting (Cyberbullying and Cyberstalking, 2012).