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Anthropology
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Anthropology is the broad scientific study of human beings, encompassing their biology, cultures, histories, and social organization across time and place. It appears in courses ranging from introductory social science surveys to upper-division seminars in archaeology, cultural theory, and human evolution. What makes it academically compelling is its scope: anthropology sits at the intersection of the humanities and sciences, asking fundamental questions about what it means to be human, how societies form and change, and how culture shapes individual life. Topics such as modern human divergence, cross-cultural comparison, and the anthropological study of religion illustrate how the field moves fluidly between biological evidence and social interpretation.

The papers archived here reflect a wide range of approaches. Some take a historical and archaeological angle, examining ancient skeletal remains, tomb artifacts, or depictions of foreign lands in Ancient Egyptian literature to reconstruct past societies. Others are ethnographic, grounding analysis in direct cultural observation or applying social theory to economic and ethical issues. Comparative work is also common, setting different cultures or institutions side by side to identify patterns. Applied perspectives appear as well, connecting anthropological frameworks to real-world contexts such as prison systems, military institutions, and regional studies like anthropology in Turkey.

A strong anthropology essay begins with a focused thesis that commits to a specific claim about culture, society, or human behavior rather than summarizing a subfield broadly. Evidence drawn from ethnographic fieldwork, archaeological findings, or established theoretical frameworks carries the most weight. The most common pitfall to avoid is treating culture as static or monolithic — effective analysis consistently acknowledges that cultures are dynamic, internally varied, and shaped by historical context.

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Paper Doctorate
Sociology of the workplace
In this article, Dixon reviews and presents the information about the work experience profiles of men and women working in New Zealand. The author uses two methods, which were introduced by Zabalza and Arrufat (1985) and by Filer (1993) for adding the women's actual paid work experience into the house hold survey databases. By using the imputed experience values and other skills, Dixon determines the components that are responsible for gender wage gap in late 1990s. This article is useful for research because it investigates that the shortfall in average hourly earnings of women is due to women's lower average level of skills which are needed for productivity.
Paper Doctorate
Vasilika a Village in Modern Greece
This paper analyzes the book "Vasilika: a Village in Modern Greece" by Ernestine Friedl. Using observation techniques rather than objective analytical tools, Friedl has issues with biases which present themselves in the text. However, the positives of the book are that Friedl is able to interpret what is seen in Vasilika and apply it to the larger world.
Paper Masters
Martin Heidegger Alber Camus and Sigmund Freud
Martin Heidegger's "Being and Time" addresses both of these complex philosophical concepts, being and time. Being means existence, or the fact that something can exist. Heidegger approaches the concept of being from…
Research Paper Doctorate
Forensic Anthropology and Ancestry Identification from Skeletal Remains
Forensic anthropology is a relatively new field in anthropology. When it was first recognized as a forensic science about thirty years ago, there were only six forensic anthropologists, all of whom knew each other…
Research Paper Doctorate
Dawenkou Culture and the Emergence of Social Complexity in Neolithic China
This work will focus on the burial assemblages of the Dawenkou site in Shandong Northern China and will revolve around the main idea that these burial sites present convincing evidence of an emerging social complexity.
Paper Doctorate
Sociology: Changing Societies in a Diverse World
Sociology: Changing Societies in a Diverse World (Fourth Edition)
Paper Masters
Museum Project Compare Two Museums
¶ … museums in order to understand the components of what makes a museums successful and interesting. I've selected the American Museum of Natural History's Hall of Eastern Woodland Plains Indians branch to compare with…
Research Paper Doctorate
Anthropology concepts and applications
Anthropology: An Analysis of Two Articles
Essay High School
Biological, Psychosocial, and Developmental Theories of Aging
Aging is a manifestation of events that occur over a span of time. This is not a uniform process, individuals' age differently, and there are major differences between normal, optimal, and pathological aging.
Paper Undergraduate
Tourism Research Philosophies and Principles Competing Philosophies
Impact of Values and Interests on Research