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Activism
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Activism as an academic subject appears across disciplines including history, sociology, political science, law, and cultural studies. It examines how individuals and movements challenge existing power structures and advocate for social change. The topic is academically rich because it sits at the intersection of theory and practice, requiring students to analyze both the ideas driving activist work and the real-world conditions those ideas respond to. Figures such as Bartolomé de Las Casas, Ida Wells Barnett, and LeRoi Jones illustrate how activism spans centuries and takes shape through writing, organizing, and legal argument, while frameworks drawn from social theory help explain why and how movements emerge and sustain themselves.

Student papers on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Biographical and historical analyses examine individual activists and trace their influence on broader social movements, including African American history from 1865 to the present. Comparative and legal approaches appear in work on judicial activism versus judicial restraint, weighing how courts interpret their own roles. Other papers focus on specific movements or cultural expressions, such as the charismatic movement in 1960s Britain or alternative music as a vehicle for social critique. Policy-oriented essays assess the effectiveness of activism through concrete areas like environmental law and women's health advocacy.

A strong essay on activism needs a clearly scoped thesis that identifies a specific actor, movement, or institutional context rather than treating activism as a single unified phenomenon. Evidence drawn from primary sources, historical records, legal opinions, or sociological frameworks carries the most weight. A common pitfall is conflating personal admiration for an activist with critical analysis — strong essays maintain analytical distance and interrogate both the strategies and limitations of the activism under examination.

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Essay Undergraduate
Declining Social Capital and Facebook
In his book about declining social capital, sociologist Robert Putnam argued that individuals in society are increasingly disconnected from one another. He defined social capital as the connections among people, meaning…
Paper Undergraduate
Global Activism an Informed Society
An informed society represents one of the most important assets of a state and of a nation. It constitutes the basis of the public opinion. However, it is not sufficient enough to be informed without being active and…
Paper Doctorate
Remembering the 1960s Qualitative Research Design: Remembering
The paper is a proposal for a hypothetical research endeavor. The topic of the research is remembering the 1960s. The research would be conducted from the qualitative tradition. The proposed techniques for the research are narrative research and design narrative research as part of a narrative, phenomenological, and arguably, ethnographic approach.
Essay Doctorate
Social There Are Many Interesting Political Actors
There are many interesting political actors in the world today, some who challenge conventional thinking and others who reiterate the status quo. Though former Prime Minister Tony Blair is not always thought of as the most popular of public figures, in large part due to his involvement of the UK in the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq he is a formidable political activist, for change. Tony Blair is clearly one of the most influential political leaders of the modern era. He demonstrates significant and sound reasoning in areas where many politicians and others seek to either look the other way or follow the popular reasoning of others. Blair became a political activist in the Labour party at a relatively young age and much that he went through within his early life molded his later opinions and strategies for change, especially with regard to environmental change and sustainable living and governance. Research surrounding Blair's position as a political activist and an environmental activist should stem from his history and experiences before and in government. The interest of this research is to determine how and why change leaders come about.
Paper Undergraduate
Caste and gender in India
Representing global social construction, hijras remain discriminated against whilst Dalits have largely succeed in finding their place in Indian society. The fact that hijras prejudice remains is not surprising given that people eh world over feel threatened by people that do not conform to the norm, in this case where gender differences are unclear and where a person can be neither man nor woman but a third gender. Societal constructs stay over time, but the discomfort against the unknown and against that which militates against human familiarity will likely linger. It may be unlikely, therefore, that hijras will ever become an acceptable part of Indian society although activist and groups will continue to rally on their behalf.
Paper Undergraduate
Women and Human Rights Summaries
Perhaps the most useful place to begin any discussion of Asian and Native American women and their relation to feminism is Devon Abbot Misesuah's study of indigenous American women, in which she argues that "because…
Essay Doctorate
Comparing intrinsic and extrinsic motivation techniques across two companies
Both Ben & Jerry's and Southwest Airlines share many similarities in the ways that they motivate employees. Both use internal as well as external motivational strategies. They use a Theory Y approach, in which employees are assumed to be desirous of seeking self-fulfillment at work as well as a paycheck, and have created unique corporate cultures that serve customers better because employees are more loyal and are happier at work.
Research Paper Doctorate
Republican Motherhood and Women\'s Role
Republican Motherhood and Women's Role In Moral Reform Movements
Research Paper Doctorate
Pluralism versus elitism: wealth and power in America
America was not founded as a Democracy or as a Monarchy, for the educated and landed founding fathers felt assured that neither would provide the nation with rights for all and privilege for the few.
Paper Masters
Economics in Mexican American culture
The paper is based on the economy of Mexico and the relation to the American economy and how the cultures of these two affect the economic trends. It looks at the significant historical leaps and events in Mexico like the treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo and how these have played in shaping the Mexican economy to what it is today