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Ambition
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Ambition is the drive to achieve goals, attain success, or rise beyond one's current circumstances, and it appears as a subject of study across a wide range of academic disciplines. Students in literature, psychology, business, and personal development courses all engage with it, whether analyzing how it shapes characters and narratives or examining how it functions in real human lives. It is academically interesting precisely because ambition sits at the intersection of individual psychology and social forces — touching on fear, fate, family expectations, and cultural definitions of what it means to be successful, particularly in contexts like America where upward mobility carries strong ideological weight.

The papers collected here approach ambition from several distinct angles. Literary analysis is common, with works like Julius Caesar serving as a lens for examining how unchecked ambition drives plot and theme. Personal and reflective writing also appears frequently, including personal statements that frame ambition in terms of individual identity, parental influence, and life goals. Other papers take a more applied or case-study approach, looking at ambition within business and organizational contexts, while some explore it through the lens of social constructs like gender inequality, asking whose ambition is rewarded and why.

A strong essay on ambition needs a focused thesis that moves beyond simply calling ambition "good" or "bad" and instead argues something specific about how it operates under particular conditions. Evidence drawn from close textual analysis, historical examples, or well-reasoned personal experience tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating ambition as a fixed trait rather than a dynamic force shaped by circumstance, culture, and consequence.

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Marketing Mix -- Kopparberg\'s Cider Marketing Kopparberg\'s
Kopparberg's flavored cider is the product focus of this analysis. Kopparberg produces several flavors of alcoholic cider, all of which is distilled and bottled in Sweden. The target market for Kopparberg cider, at least when it first entered the UK market, was the 23 to 35 year-old crowd—in other words, a consumer group that was no longer in college. The marketing goal was to take market share away from the manufacturers of white wine, flavored alcoholic beverages (FAB), and spirits.
Paper Undergraduate
Legal Transplants the Objective of This Study
The objective of this study is to discuss and compare two legal transplants with reference to at least one African or Asian legal system. For the purpose of this work, Turkey and legal transplants will be examined. Legal transplantation is the rendering of cultural, societal and religious beliefs into a cohesion with the legal system of a country. In the country of Turkey, this process is met with inflexibility but with dodged determination to apply the Swiss Code to Turkish legal matters, however, in the country of China the process was much smoother. This is because the entire legal system is somewhat transplanted or formulated from influences outside of the Chinese legal system and as such is a legal system that is highly conducive to transplantation and ultimately application of the legal principles contained in the transplanted law. This is also known as diffusion of law involving the socialization of laws imported from a separate geographical space and transportation of the law from one geographical location to the other.
Paper Undergraduate
Most Important Change Needed to the CJ System
Criminal Justice System – Most Important Change Needed According to my research of Criminal Justice websites, journal articles and books, perhaps the most needed improvement is the System's institutionalized assistance in breaking the cycle of substance abuse in America. On a daily basis, all levels of the Criminal Justice System must deal with either substance abuse charges or related problems such as thefts committed to obtain drug money, domestic abuse by drug abusers and probation violations by failed drug tests. As a result, the System is forced to deal with the significant impact of drug abuse in the United States. It appears that Criminal Justice experts are determined to break the cycle of substance abuse in our Nation in order to handle all the drug/alcohol-related problems faced by the System. Through decades of intelligent observation and practice, the System is gradually realizing that merely punishing substance abuse offenders is an ineffective method of dealing with the substance abuse cycle. Consequently, the System must pay closer attention to the science of addiction and institutionalize methods of dealing with addiction throughout the System. First, the System should require system-wide continuing education of judges, prosecutors, defense attorneys, police, probation officers and all other members of the Criminal Justice System about the science of addiction. Secondly, the educators and the members of the Criminal Justice System should work together for a statewide or even nationwide plan to determine: what roles each member of the Criminal Justice System should play in dealing with addiction, according to his/her job in the System; what information must be gathered to decide whether a person suffers from addiction; the earliest/best times to screen people who come into contact with the System; all the possible alternatives for dealing with screened people, depending on their assessment results. Third, these decisions should be used to design effective System-wide: alternative programs for dealing with addiction; screening and assessment in order to decide which people should be merely prosecuted and which people need alternatives such as substance abuse treatment. Fourth, the System needs to empower and encourage all members of the Criminal Justice System to use effective alternatives to sentencing. Fifth, the System needs to empower and encourage all members of the Criminal Justice System to supervise people being helped by those alternatives, using the power of their positions to encourage each person's cooperation. By adopting a System-wide approach to substance abuse, the Criminal Justice System can more effectively and ultimately inexpensively deal with our rampant drug/alcohol-related criminal problems.
Paper Doctorate
The American Dream in Hemingway and Williams
¶ … Streetcar Named Desire and the Snows of Kilimanjaro
Paper Doctorate
Film review and analysis
This a set of questions that are answered about the documentary film Waiting for Superman. The film follows a group of children that live in poor performing school districts and illustrates the drama that they face in pursing education. The film suggests that charter schools are a key solution in addressing the problems that the film highlights.
Research Paper Doctorate
History and philosophy of education
The character of Robinson Crusoe have shown as to how faith helps a person to survive purely on determination and will. This story has conveyed that how Robinson has survived in difficult situations even though he had…
Research Paper Doctorate
American Political Philosophy
Within this paper, the general theory of republicanism will be presented. The conceptualization of republicanism discussed within the paper as an American political philosophy will be based on The Federalist Papers…
Research Paper Doctorate
Education concepts and applications
African-Americans are second only to Native Americans, historically, in terms of poor treatment at the hands of mainstream American society. Although African-Americans living today enjoy nominal equality, the social…
Paper Doctorate
Crime Punishment and Criminal Justice
The characters in Great Expectations often seem to be operating outside or just outside the law in gray areas where what is legally correct clash with what is morally the right thing to do. The theme of crime in Dickens' novels is used as a focal point to explore his deep concern for the pervasive array of social problems that permeated England in the nineteenth century including crime, punishment and justice.
Paper Doctorate
Keats Dickinson, Keats and Eliot
Tradition and modernity are sometimes seen as two opposing forces. However, a consideration of some notable poetic works demonstrates that they are in fact symbiotic. This essay examines poems by Keats, Dickinson and Eliot in order to demonstrate that modernity and tradition must work hand in hand to keep such artistic media in a state of evolution