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Americas
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The Americas as an academic topic spans history, cultural studies, anthropology, and humanities courses, inviting students to examine the Western Hemisphere across vast stretches of time and across deeply varied societies. What makes the subject academically compelling is its scale and complexity: from pre-Columbian civilizations explored in works like 1491: New Revelations of the Americas Before Columbus to the colonial transformations analyzed through Latin colonial history, the region forces students to grapple with questions of land, power, culture, and identity. The recurring presence of Europe, Africa, and forced migration in the scholarship signals that the Americas cannot be understood in isolation but must be studied as a product of violent global entanglements, including slavery and conquest.

Student papers on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some are historically grounded, tracing colonial legacies or examining specific events such as the smallpox plague of 1779. Others are comparative, setting migration patterns or cultural developments side by side across different populations. Literary and humanistic angles also appear, including engagements with abolitionist literature and Chicano and Chicana studies frameworks. Cartographic and geographical perspectives surface as well, reflecting interest in how maps shaped and communicated ideas about the hemisphere. Works like Chasteen's Born of Blood and Fire and Salisbury's Manitou and Providence ground several papers in specific scholarly conversations.

A strong essay on the Americas requires a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad survey. Evidence drawn from primary sources, specific historical events, or named scholarly texts carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating "the Americas" as a single, uniform place — successful essays specify a region, period, or community and build their argument outward from that defined scope.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Guns, germs and steel: the fates of human societies
Jared Diamond's book - Guns, Germs and Steel: The Fates of Human Societies won the Pulitzer Prize, the Phi Beta Kappa Award in Science, the Rhone-Poulenc Prize and the Commonwealth club of California's Gold Medal.
Paper Undergraduate
history in architecture
Because they had been very well adapted to the surrounding environment, the primitive people did not felt the need of building houses to shelter them. However, as time passed and humans evolved, the first dwellings…
Paper Undergraduate
Ukraine -- Country Risk Assessment
With the emergence of globalization, economic agents were presented with the opportunity of territorially expanding their operations into other regions. The endeavor allowed them increased access to resources, including…
Research Paper Doctorate
The Fox Wars
The Fox Wars were fought between the Fox (Mesquakie) American Indians and the French in the early 18th Century. The first Fox War occurred from roughly 1712 to 1714, although there were problems between the groups…
Research Paper Doctorate
Controling Organized Crime
The purpose of this paper is to research "Organized Crime" historically and what effects it has on society in the present time as well as implications for the future and then to examine what suggestions have been…
Paper Undergraduate
Health and globalization: impacts and interconnections
The process of globalization has seen a massive expansion of the known trading world, in which nations both industrialized and undeveloped interact across sea lanes and through major trade routes.
Essay Doctorate
Territorial Expansion How Did the U.S. Acquire
On the auspicious date of April 30, 1803, the United States of America bought eight hundred and twenty eight thousand square miles worth of land from the French government of Napoleon Bonaparte. Thomas Jefferson, the President of America, wanted to secure this deal. Wars were rampaging overseas in the continent of Europe and Napoleon had intentions to safeguard what he had acquired there. The area was a vast stretch of land extending from the Mississippi River to the Rocky Mountains. Spain had ceded Louisiana to France and this did not have positive implications for the young American government. The diplomatic world was discussing the accession as early as 1802.
Paper Doctorate
Augusto Pinochet and Human Rights
Augusto Pinochet and Human Rights Abuses Introduction Augusto Pinochet was the principle actor in a notorious military coup in Chile – ironically, the date was September 11, 1973 – that was partly orchestrated by the United States. This bloody coup led to an extraordinary period of human rights violations and other heinous crimes in Chile. This paper relates to the human rights part of the Pinochet story, what happened to the people of Chile because of the legacy of Pinochet, why that is important today, and how the violations of human rights in Chile mirrored similar violations in Europe and elsewhere.
Paper Undergraduate
Genocide: historical contexts and contemporary definitions
Genocide. The word brings to mind thoughts of places as far away as Sudan and Darfur and as close as Germany and the Holocaust. They bring to mind images of family members hiding in bathrooms, horrific torture and…
Essay Doctorate
Atlantic revolutions and the formation of revolutionary movements
These Revolutionary Movements to Form The objective of this study is to examine the American, French, and Haitian Revolutions, known as the Atlantic Revolutions and to answer as to how the structure of the Atlantic World created the environment for these revolutionary movements to form. The North American Revolution took place between 1775 and 1878. The French Revolution took place between 1789 and 1815, and the Haitian Revolution between 1971 and 1804 and finally the Spanish American Revolutions between 1810 and 1825. These revolutions were found because of the issues of slavery, nations and nationalism, and the beginnings of feminism. In fact, the entire century from 1750 to 1850 was a century of revolutions.