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911
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The September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks represent one of the most studied events in modern academic life, appearing across criminology, political science, security studies, history, and public policy courses. Students write about this topic because it sits at the intersection of government response, national safety, terrorism, and social change, making it relevant to nearly every discipline that examines how nations confront catastrophic threats. The attacks transformed how America and other countries approach security, law enforcement, and military engagement, giving the topic enduring academic weight beyond its immediate historical moment.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of analytical approaches. Some examine policy and government response, including air cargo security, national security frameworks, and emergency management practices like disaster recovery. Others take a political angle, exploring how the attacks were used to justify military action in Iraq or to implement domestic measures such as internment policies. Additional papers address human and social dimensions, including how the disaster affected young people and how it shaped cultural and political systems both within America and across other countries.

A strong essay on this topic requires a clearly scoped thesis that connects the attacks to a specific consequence, policy, or pattern rather than attempting to cover the entire event. Evidence drawn from government reports, documented security policies, or verifiable accounts of institutional responses carries the most weight in academic arguments. The most common pitfall is writing descriptively about what happened without building an analytical argument — successful papers explain not just what occurred but why it mattered within a defined framework, such as national safety, terrorism response, or political decision-making.

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Essay Doctorate
Collaboration Software Evaluation and Analysis as Virtual
As virtual teams become pervasive in many enterprises globally, the need for stable, secure and scalable collaboration platforms becomes more and more important to organizations achieving complex strategic goals and objectives. Virtual teams can often coordinate and collaborate using personal productivity applications, yet on more complex tasks requiring orchestration of complex workflows and sharing dozens of documents at the same time, Microsoft Outlook and e-mail break down and don't deliver the level of functionality necessary. Given the rapid rise in virtual teams in conjunction with the lack of support in many personal productivity software applications for intensive collaboration an entirely new area of enterprise software has emerged. Customer Relationship Management (CRM) systems with social networking functionality (Social CRM), enterprise content management, knowledge management, groupware, portals and Web Services have all emerged as proven solutions to the continual challenge of communication and collaboration in virtual teams (Banker, Bardhan, 2006). Evaluating collaboration tools for time, place, richness, task and adoption by team task is the goal of this analysis. It is assumed throughout this analysis that the scenario the collaboration software is used in are virtual teams located at geographically diverse points globally, across time zones and cultures. It is further assumed that the level of collaboration that will occur is dependent on clarity, consistency and trust being attained over time (Siakas, Siakas, 2008)
Paper Undergraduate
Healthcare Management Information Systems Telemedicine
This research paper looks at telemedicine and the challenges it faces in it administration. Its current usage in healthcare industries around the globe and what kind of impact it has on society today and what it should be in the future. The paper identifies the developments in the field of Telemedicine and evaluates the changes it has made in administration and care giving to patients.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Asthma Is the Most Common
¶ … asthma is the most common chronic disease of childhood and one of the leading causes of morbidity in children. In the United States, trends of increasing childhood asthma prevalence and morbidity in recent years…
Paper Undergraduate
Letter of Advocacy in Re:
IN RE: Reinstatement of the Non-Violent Convicted Felon's Right
Paper Undergraduate
Civil Liberties During War Losses
Losses on the Home Front in American History
Thesis Undergraduate
Air cargo security measures and implementation
Since the events of 911, airport security has been an important issue. The Transportation Security Administration (TSA)" is responsible for ensuring the security of all modes of transportation, including cargo placed…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Civil Disobedience Against 24/7 Surveillance
Civil Disobedience Against 24/7 Surveillance
Paper Doctorate
Social psychology concepts and research questions
¶ … social psychology and note how it is different from other, similar fields.
Research Paper Doctorate
Role of Land Settlement Cooperative
Agriculture is a mark of civilization for the mankind.
Paper Undergraduate
Technology in disaster management: an analysis
Over the last several years, the issue of how private organizations and governments are responding to various manmade as well as natural disasters has been increasingly brought to the forefront.