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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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Thesis Undergraduate
Expatriates in the United Arab Emirates
This analysis looked at the opinions of emirates and residents of the UAE and their opinions of the large and growing number of expatriates living in the country. Although there is a fringe element of the culture that is deeply afraid of losing their national identity, these citizens constitute a small fraction of the population. The next most concerned group seemed to be students who were somewhat worried about their political opportunities as well as their opportunities for employment, yet they were completely tolerant of the trend at the same time.
Paper Doctorate
Arab Spring and Terrorism
The topic for this particular paper revolves around the topic of ‘The Arab Spring'. The paper thus tackled the following aspects: The Arab Spring: the political movement; Impact on Egypt; Arab Spring and terrorism activity in Egypt; and, Impact of the Arab Spring on the state and non-state sponsored terrorism in Egypt
Paper Undergraduate
Woodrow Wilson\'s Idealism and Human Rights Today
Wilson's idealism was the progenitor of the modern human rights movement
Paper Doctorate
Liberation vs. Control in Cyberspace
The Internet is often presented as a place in which freedom reigns supreme and which is completely unregulated. But while the Internet may have enabled certain pro-democracy groups to create channels of communication that gave rise to movements like the Arab Spring, it has also proven to be a tool of government surveillance and is much more heavily regulated than many users are aware of when online.
Paper Undergraduate
Resist in the City
This paper discusses theories of urban resistance in relation to the Occupy movement in the US and the Arab Spring. It highlights the unique ability of urban spaces to bring people together with common needs and wants and to organize them in an effective manner. The influence of the Internet through mediums such as Twitter as a way of facilitating urban protest is also discussed .
Paper Undergraduate
Economics of the United Arab Emirates
UAE has gained rapid growth since the exploration of oil in the region. It has related heavily on the oil exports. However, after the recent economic crisis the country has reduced its oil based economic reliance up to 25%. The signing of Free Trade agreement for foreign investors with United Sates in 2004 has also played its part in increasing the economic activity. The foreigner investors are offered 100 percent ownership and no taxes. The issues with real estate crisis during the recession have affected Dubai and it was financially supported by Abu Dhabi during the turbulent times.
Essay Doctorate
Democracy / Liberty Is Direct Democracy Desirable
Is direct democracy desirable and/or possible today? The question is addressed first theoretically, with reference to Montesquieu's Spirit of the Laws, which actually categorizes direct democracy as one of the corruptions into which a democratic system can descend, by an insistence on too much egalitarianism. Direct democracy is considered as an ideal, which is desirable insofar as it offers a critique of contemporary politics, but whose possibility is limited by whether or not it can be feasibly implemented. Two contemporary case studies are brought in to examine the question further: the experiment with internet-organized direct democracy in Estonia, and the experiment with social-media-inspired direct democracy in the Occupy Wall Street movement. Paper then offers an answer to a second essay question about conceptions of freedom in contemporary liberal democracy.
Paper Undergraduate
Social business and retail sector integration
This study examines the use of social media such as MySpace and Facebook by retailers to grow their businesses in recent years, including the background and overview, the benefits of social media for retailers, and factors to consider and best practices in administering social media. A series of recommendations concludes the study.
Paper Undergraduate
BIM Implementation Strategy for Libya's Construction Sector
This essay has to do with building information modeling and how it can be used in new sectors to improve the construction industries around the world. The first five pages of the paper look at what BIM is and how it is being used right now. The benefits and issues of the programs are discussed and then that is related to the Libyan construction industry to see if there is a fit.
Paper Doctorate
Did the Arab Spring Reduce Terrorism?
Briefly describes what took place during the political movement known as the Arab Spring and indicate which countries were affected. Analyzes the impact of this movement on one of these countries in terms of political and social change. Determines if this movement will increase or decrease the amount of terrorism activity emanating from the country you selected and support your thesis. Provide an overall analysis of the impact of the Arab Spring on the state and non-state sponsored terrorism in the region.