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Arab Spring
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The Arab Spring refers to the wave of popular uprisings and political revolutions that swept across the Middle East and North Africa, toppling governments and reshaping regional power structures. Students write about this topic across political science, world studies, international relations, and sociology courses because it offers a concentrated case study in how popular movements challenge entrenched authority. Countries including Egypt, Tunisia, and Libya became focal points for understanding how mass protests translate into political change, and why some revolutions succeed while others collapse into prolonged conflict or authoritarian restoration.

The papers archived on this topic approach the Arab Spring from several distinct angles. Political analysis of government responses to protests is common, as are comparative examinations of outcomes across different countries in the Middle East. Several papers focus on the relationship between the Arab Spring and terrorism, exploring how instability created openings for violent actors. Other approaches include the role of social media and Web 2.0 technologies in organizing resistance, the position of groups like the Muslim Brotherhood in Egypt, the nonviolent dimensions of the struggle, and questions of foreign policy toward the region. Nation-building challenges in neighboring conflict zones also appear as a related lens.

A strong essay on the Arab Spring benefits from a tightly scoped thesis — arguing about a specific country, outcome, or causal factor rather than summarizing events broadly. Evidence drawn from government policy decisions, documented protest movements, and the roles of particular political actors carries the most analytical weight. The most common pitfall is treating the Arab Spring as a single unified event rather than acknowledging the significantly different trajectories each affected country experienced.

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Essay Doctorate
Critical thinking analysis in media and professional contexts
Collaborations between port security and enforcement operations
Paper Masters
The war in Afghanistan
Abstract Following the unprecedented 9/ 11 terrorist attacks on American soil, an atmosphere of fear and hysteria swept through the world. US reprisal came in the form of fully blown war against terrorism as they assured the world that America would use all resources at its disposal to wage war on terror. Even as the demise of Osama bin Laden marked an important milestone in the US-led war on terror, it appears as though U.S. Middle East foreign policy is going to take yet another tactical turn. After scaling down operations in Iraq in the first term, the Obama administration is at least rhetorically signaling that they will remove combat troops in 2014. By just about every measure, Afghanistan is still smoldering causing speculation that it could possibly reignite. Will the US finally withdraw the combat troops by 2014? Experts believe that withdraw is not in America's best interests. Proponents of the conflict theories, realism, world systems theory and a section of Marxist scholars lay foundation for an integrated approach to this issue. Is there a room for compassion in international relations? Enduring tensions and persistent warfare seems to indicate the exact opposite. The war on terror has caused historic misunderstanding, which has paralyzed relations between Middle East and the West. They have entered a war from which they might never get out in this lifetime.
Essay Doctorate
Riot Disruptive Movement \"Occupy Wall Street\" Place
Martin Luther's involvement in sixteenth century's Christian controversy brought forward the Protestant Reformation. His teachings generated a new Christian branch that has come to be one of the ideology's most important beliefs. In comparison to Catholic law, Lutheranism promotes the idea that the church is not necessarily one of the most important institutions making it possible for people to connect with God. Moreover, the ideology encourages individuals to focus on developing a more personal relationship with God, as this respective connection can apparently be even stronger as long as the person is determined and as long as he or she concentrates on faith.
Thesis Undergraduate
2012 United States Presidential Election
This is an eight page paper about the 2012 presidential election. It is divided into five sections. The five sections include an introduction, a section on the issues, a section on the writer's opinion on the issues, a section on polling processes and methods, and a section on my prediction for the election. the issues selected include the economy, foreign policy, and immigration.
Paper Masters
Information Technology (IT) and Society
This is an eight page paper about the way social media and blogging have changed the way people use the internet. the paper is about the way that social media and blogs affect online communication and information sharing. the personal and the private are blurred into the same domain. political, business, and personal effects of social media are discussed in this paper.
Paper Undergraduate
Arab Spring Specifically the Country of Jordan and Their Involvement
Jordan is one of the primary prtners the US has among nations in the Middle East. It is important that the US continue to work with Jordan to make sure that these relations are not strained due to the importance of this relationship. The US has seen problems with its intelligence services and economy because of the problems excperienced by Jordan and others during protests related to the Arab Spring uprisings, and they need to make sure that these bonds remain strong.
Paper Doctorate
Political Risk Models the Recent
The recent volatility in the Middle East, which shifted the dynamism and optimism of an Arab Spring into the potential conflagration and destructiveness of an Arab Winter, has refocused attention on political risk in…
Essay Doctorate
Features of Residual (or \"Secondary\") Orality Preserved
The answers to these questions are grounded in literary history. This is not an essay as much as it is an exploration of some of the greatest tales that have been told (both in ancient times and modern) and why they still need to be remembered. The tales of the Norse, Tolkiens books and Beowulf are all considered in these questions as the author tries to critically analyze them.
Paper Doctorate
Chabros International\'s Expansion to North Africa Chabros
The research discusses a problem from initial invention to resolution. The case selected is that of Chabros International, a company that wishes to enter the Moroccan market. This is an issue because Chabros has exclusively remained in the Middle East until now and they are making an inknown foray. This paper looks at the possible problems inhernent in this move and decides on a solution to the problem.
Paper Undergraduate
History of the Brotherhood Group, Its Goals,
This is an essay discussing the organization begun by al Banna in the 1930's--the Muslim Brotherhood. The goals of the organization are to return Arab countries to fundamentalist rule and to create a single Arab state. Western countries and Israel see a problem with this and are trying to make sense of this nonviolent organization.