Essay Topic Hub

Aliens
Essays

254+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

254 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

The term "aliens" carries two distinct meanings in academic writing, and student essays on this topic tend to split between them: the legal and political concept of foreign nationals living outside their country of citizenship, and the speculative or scientific question of extraterrestrial life. This dual nature makes the topic appear across a surprisingly wide range of courses, including political science, international law, history, sociology, and even theology or media studies. The intersection of rights, identity, government authority, and human curiosity gives the subject genuine intellectual weight regardless of which angle a course requires.

The papers archived here reflect that range of interpretations. Several focus on legal and civil rights questions, examining whether non-citizens should hold the same protections as citizens in courts and under frameworks like international law. Others take a socio-political approach, exploring the experiences of specific immigrant or diaspora communities such as Hispanic and Latino Americans. A smaller cluster moves toward speculative and scientific territory, including the probability of extraterrestrial life and pop-culture treatments of alien figures in science fiction. Historical and policy-driven case analyses also appear, using structured methods to work through real legal disputes involving foreign nationals.

A strong essay on this topic begins by defining which meaning of "alien" it is addressing and committing to that definition throughout. Legal arguments carry weight when grounded in specific rights frameworks, court cases, or policy analysis. Speculative essays benefit from engaging scientific reasoning or cultural theory rather than relying on assertion alone. The most common pitfall is conflating the two meanings mid-argument, which undermines the essay's coherence and weakens its central claim.

Sort by:
Research Paper Doctorate
Protecting Ourselves Against Terrorism
Protecting Ourselves against Terrorism major consequence of 9/11 has been that now one cannot talk rationally about terrorism and its causes. Any attempt to look for the reason why anyone would be mad enough to blow up…
Paper Undergraduate
Religious Life in Ancient Athens
Athenians practiced a polytheistic religion which expressed itself through civic festivals and cults. The system developed greatly in the Classical period. The festival served to provide the Athenians with a basis in…
Research Paper Doctorate
Emergency response and the September 11 attacks
¶ … war on international terrorism and terrorism inside the U.S.A. is the main theme of mass media and political agendas. War on terrorism opens the eyes of Americans on modern geopolitical situation telling them about…
Paper Doctorate
Glendale Mall Sometimes a Mall to Paraphrase
This paper examines the Glendale as a site in which the commerce that is enacted is far less important that the growing-up that occurs there. The fact that teenagers use malls as a sounding board for their adult lives is never an explicit aspect of the identity of the Glendale Galleria, but an ethnographic investigation of the mall exposes such a function as lying only a very little bit under the surface. This paper analyses Glendale Galleria as a themed space, although one that is "themed" in ways that are ambiguous, multivalent, and contradictory – and no doubt for the most part unintentional.
Research Paper Doctorate
Illegal immigration: causes, effects, and policy implications
According to NewsMax.com, "Almost no issue divides Republicans as deeply" as President Bush's new proposal to offer so-called "guest worker status" to otherwise illegal immigrants. The guest worker status proposal…
Research Paper Doctorate
Design influences on consumer behavior and product adoption
¶ … Egyptian Hieroglyphics and Other Ancient Symbols on 18th, 19th and 20th Century Surface Pattern Design and Their Influences on Contemporary Design
Paper Doctorate
Representation of Women Through Media Has Changed
This paper demonstrates how representation of women through media has changed from the 1960s to the present. The paper takes into consideration how the representation depicts patriarchal bias. The research explores various materials including articles from magazines that portray women, as well as books and television shows. It explores the roles of women in the media.
Essay Doctorate
History From 1865 to the Present Day.
The essay is a review of the history of immigration from 1865 to the present day. To focus the research, six subtopics are selected; three from before 1930 and three from after.There are more than 50 million immigrants (legal and illegal) and their U.S.-born children (under 18) in the United States as of August 2012. As of the last decade, most immigrants come from the following countries: Honduras (85 percent), India (74 percent), Guatemala (73 percent), Peru (54 percent), El Salvador (49 percent), Ecuador (48 percent), and China (43 percent). Approximately, 28 percent of these immigrants are in the country illegally. immigrants who live in America for at least 20 years are more likely to live in poverty, benefit from the welfare system, and lack health insurance than are native born Americans. Many of the immigrants arriving in this country also possess relatively little education (Right Side News; online). These factors explain the intensity of animosity and fear that the group stimulates amongst native-born Americans who not only accuse them of impoverishing their country but also of stealing jobs from Americans who need them. The animosity is all the greater amongst immigrants who settle in the country illegally.
Research Paper Doctorate
The Patriot Act and its impact on civil liberties
Patriot Act: Advantages and Disadvantages
Essay Doctorate
1921 and 1927, the Trial and Appeals
The Sacco and Vanzetti trial was a source of extreme social turmoil in America in the 1920s. The trial centered around a murder and robbery of a Braintree, Massachusetts business. Two Italian immigrants, who were also believed to be anarchists, were arrested and tried for the crimes. The trial and subsequent appeals created considerable controversy which centered around the weaknesses in the government's case and the numerous errors made in the prosecution.