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Alaska
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Alaska serves as a focal point for essays across environmental studies, political science, anthropology, public policy, and business courses. Its geographic scale, indigenous heritage, and economic complexity make it a compelling subject for academic inquiry. Students are drawn to Alaska because it presents concentrated versions of problems that play out across the nation — resource extraction, environmental risk, indigenous rights, and the costs of remote governance. The recurring tension between industrial access to natural areas and the preservation of those same areas gives the topic a built-in argumentative structure that suits college-level writing.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Environmental case studies focus on the Exxon Valdez oil spill, examining both the disaster's causes and its public relations aftermath. Anthropological work compares indigenous cultures, including Cree and Inuit communities, analyzing language preservation and cultural identity. Policy-oriented essays address issues such as sex offender treatment programs, family discrimination laws, and how Alaska's approach compares to other states. Some papers take a local or personal angle, grounding broader arguments in specific communities like Anchorage or Eagle River.

A strong essay on Alaska should establish a clear, specific thesis rather than treating the state as a general backdrop. The most persuasive arguments connect a defined problem — environmental, legal, cultural, or economic — to concrete evidence such as policy records, documented costs, or comparative data across regions. Writers should resist the urge to cover too much geography or history at once, since broad overviews rarely leave room for the focused analysis that earns strong marks.

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Essay Doctorate
Wounded Knee Ll and Leonard Peltier Native American Religious Expression and Dawes Act
Leonard Peltier has been in prison since 1979, after being convicted of the murder of two FBI agents at the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation four years earlier. He was an activist with the American Indian Movement (AIM) and at least on the Left has been regarded as a political prisoner, convicted for a crime that he probably did not commit and for which two of his other alleged accomplices were acquitted at a federal trial in Cedar Rapids, Iowa. This occurred before his conviction, but since he was not extradited from Canada in time for this trial the federal government tried him alone and obtained a sentence of life imprisonment. His next parole hearing will not be for thirteen years, and despite many years of protests and petitions on his behalf, no U.S. president has even shown much interest in granting him a pardon or clemency. Peltier has always stated that he did not shoot the FBI agents, although he admitted firing at them out of self-defense.
Research Paper Doctorate
Billboards and the First Amendment
¶ … First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution guarantees to us freedom of speech - promises to each citizen and resident of the United States that the government will not tell us what we can or cannot say. Right?
Paper Doctorate
History of the Tobacco Industry: Ethics and Ecology
Throughout its long and storied history, tobacco has served the various appetites of religious shamans, aristocratic noblemen, common sailors, money changers and modern-day captains of industry.
Research Paper Doctorate
Business ethics principles and applications
Maria Bailey clearly and blatantly misrepresented the size of her start-up business, but shrugged it off saying she knew what she was "capable of doing" and just wanted to show potential clients "what we were going to…
Paper Masters
Workplace Drug Screening Opinion
Most employers in the United States are not required to do drug testing on either current or potential employees, although the majority have the right to do so (United States Department of Labor, 2010).
Essay High School
Criminal Justice Should Sherriff\'s Be Elected? Across
Across the nation popular election is the almost standardized means of selection of the sheriff. Sheriffs are elected to four-year terms in forty one states, two-year terms in three states, a three-year term in one…
Research Paper Doctorate
International Regulation of Tourism in Antarctica
Since the mid-1980s, Antarctica has been an increasingly popular tourist destination, despite the relative danger of visiting the largest, least explored -- and arguably least understood -- continent on earth.
Research Paper Doctorate
Drug courts and criminal justice outcomes
The Department of Justice of the United States of America, in order to cope with heavy work pressure, had to introduce a separate court for the sole purpose of dealing with criminal offenses committed by drug abusers…
Paper High School
Impacts of Sleep Disorders on College Students
Many college students experience sleep deprivation, either because of a physiological disorder, an immaturity of their adolescent body clock, or by choice, either to accommodate a social life, a job, and/or family demands. They author investigated a correlation between sleep deprivation and poor academic performance. Not surprisingly, students who reported sleep-debt had lower GPAs than those who did not. The author found no significant correlation between self-reported sleep disorders and gender or race.
Paper Doctorate
Person In Aviation
This paper is an expose of one of the greatest figures in US military history. General Billy Mitchell was one of the main reasons that the United States has a separate Air Force and he was a tireless advocate of air power. This paper looks at his life from his successes to his failures, and also examines why he has made a lasting effect in aviation history.