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Aggression
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Aggression is the study of hostile, harmful, or forceful behavior directed toward others, and it occupies a central place in social psychology, developmental psychology, criminology, and social issues courses. What makes it academically compelling is the unresolved tension between biological and environmental explanations — captured in the recurring question of whether humans are innately aggressive or learn aggressive behavior through experience. Papers in this area also engage frameworks such as the Big Five personality model to examine how traits like anger and hostility shape individual conduct, while broader contexts such as World War II and the behavior of sexually violent offenders illustrate how aggression scales from the personal to the societal.

Student papers on this topic approach aggression from several distinct angles. Developmental and heritability perspectives examine how aggressive tendencies emerge in children and adolescents, including through phenomena like play fighting and bullying. Behavioral analyses connect aggression to broader patterns of violence, while psychiatric and clinical angles consider how aggression manifests in institutional settings such as nursing environments. Some papers take a social-psychological approach, working through structured questionnaires or discussion prompts to assess how individuals and societies understand and respond to violent behavior.

A strong essay on aggression establishes a focused thesis by committing to one explanatory lens — biological, social learning, personality-based, or situational — rather than surveying all of them loosely. Evidence drawn from psychological research, documented case studies, or specific historical events carries more weight than general claims about human nature. The most common pitfall is conflating aggression with violence; treating them as identical oversimplifies the topic, since aggression encompasses a wide range of behaviors that do not always result in physical harm.

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Paper Undergraduate
Mexico: history, geography, and culture
My friends, we are now facing difficult times during which our most basic rights are violated by a government that claims to employ modern attitudes in regard to Mexican citizens. How many of you can honestly say that…
Essay Undergraduate
Treating Juvenile Delinquency Juvenile Justice Delinquency Treatment
This paper proposes a new program specifically designed to deal with the needs of African-American males in juvenile detention facilities. African-Americans make up a disproportionate number of incarcerated juveniles. Viewed in tandem with high drop-out rates, the vocational prospects of this demographic of juvenile detainees seems bleak. The program strives to address academic as well as social deficits.
Paper Doctorate
Body Language Effects of Body Language Importance
The Importance of Body Language for Effective Communication
Research Paper Doctorate
Factors influencing gang membership among young teenage boys in junior high
Gang involvement among teenagers is a well-researched topic of interest. Themes such as age of participation, reasons for gang involvement, demographics for gang relations, initiation rights, and family relations among…
Paper Undergraduate
Shiite Sunni the Cultural Conflict
The Cultural Conflict Between Sunnis and Shiites: A Phenomenon of Social Cognition
Paper Undergraduate
Bullying patterns across school gender and ethnic groups
The destructive ramifications of bullying behavior in schools has become an issue of national (and even worldwide) concern for the safety of students. The fact that there has been an increase in school shootings has…
Paper Doctorate
The Economics of U.S. Health Care: Costs, Medicare, and Market Failures
The healthcare in the United States is a system of economics that has been referred to as a Ponzi scheme and most assuredly, the economics of the U.S. healthcare system are unsound at best. The United States is the only industrialized nation in the world that fails to provide universal access to basic health care and according to the work of Kilchevsky (2004), ‘the absence of universal health coverage has been called ‘one of the great unsolved problems facing the United States at the onset of the 21st century." (p.1) This work intends to examine the economics of health care in the United States.
Research Paper Doctorate
National Human Environmental Securities
National security is an important concept which has often been mistakenly used to refer to protection against external threats. With people gaining better knowledge of the term security, national security has become a…
Paper Undergraduate
Military naval support at Guadalcanal
The fight for Guadalcanal was the result of the Japanese attempt to secure other valuable acquisitions in the Pacific Theater and to disrupt Allied military efforts in that Theater. Having successfully seized control of the Philippines, British Malaya, Singapore and the East Indies, the Japanese sought to protect those interests by seizure of additional islands. In addition, the Japanese sought to increasingly disrupt effective cooperation among Allied forces in the Pacific Theater by seizure of secondary islands. Guadalcanal was one of those secondarily seized islands. Aware of the importance of these islands, the Allied forces monitored Japanese movements throughout late 1941 and early 1942, though the U. S. Navy had suffered significant losses and was in some respects insufficient to successfully fight Japanese forces at that time. The Naval Battle of Guadalcanal was essentially Japan's last major attempt to control the seas surrounding Guadalcanal and/or retake control of the island itself. The battle itself and Allied victory in this battle served as a turning point in the Pacific Theater War, for several reasons. Occurring November 13 – 15, 1942, the Battle's very existence and importance weakened the Japanese overall war effort. Japanese concentration of limited forces for the Battle resulted in a decrease of needed land forces, thereby weakening Japanese war efforts elsewhere. In addition, Allied victory in the Battle succeeded in shifting Japanese efforts from aggression to defense: Japanese actions on and around Guadalcanal provided supplies to existing Japanese troops and evacuated troops rather than providing fresh troops and assertively staging attacks; also, the Japanese entirely retreated from the island in January of 1943 and the Allies were assured of utter control of the island approximately one month later. Finally, Allied victory and Japanese defeat at the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal was a unique key to Allied victory in the Pacific Theater: the United States was then readily able to deliver fresh troops and supplies on Guadalcanal; Guadalcanal proved to be a stepping stone to Allied victories in the entire Solomon chain of islands; and the United States was better able to isolate and neutralize other Japanese bases in the Pacific. Consequently, the Naval Battle of Guadalcanal was just as vital a turning point as was the Battle of Midway in World War II's Pacific Theater.
Research Paper Doctorate
Terrorism (4 Different Topics, 3
Terrorism (4 Different Topics, 3 Pages Each)