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Army
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The army as an institution sits at the intersection of political science, history, and public policy, making it a recurring subject in government and military studies courses. Students examine how armies are organized, how they reflect national values, and how they shape — and are shaped by — the states that maintain them. Works like Rick Atkinson's An Army at Dawn and the novel Once an Eagle appear alongside historical figures such as Ulysses S. Grant and Jefferson Davis, showing that the topic spans both primary leadership studies and broader institutional analysis. Military reform, organizational culture, and the evolution of training and operations give the subject sustained academic relevance across undergraduate and graduate programs, including professional military education at institutions like Command and General Staff College.

Papers on this subject take several distinct approaches. Historical analyses trace specific conflicts, reforms, or command decisions — military reform in 1874 and the Rwandan Army for the Liberation of Rwanda are representative examples. Organizational and cultural case studies examine how armies develop cohesion, customs, and courtesies, or how civilian institutions intersect with military structures. Film and book reviews, such as John Huston's The Battle of San Pietro, bring media analysis into the mix, while biographical treatments of figures like Grant and Jefferson Davis ground abstract arguments in individual leadership.

A strong essay on this topic requires a focused thesis that connects a specific aspect of army structure, history, or culture to a broader argument about military effectiveness or civil-military relations. Evidence drawn from primary sources, policy documents, or well-documented case studies carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating the army as a monolithic institution — effective papers distinguish between eras, branches, national contexts, and the different pressures that shape soldiers and commands over time.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Alexander the Great: life and conquests
There is not much more that can be said about Alexander the Great. He has been the subject of countless books, several movies, and hundreds of years of speculation. People have varying opinions about Alexander.
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Roles and responsibilities in organizational contexts
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Ancient Rome and Caesar's Gallic campaigns
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Glory Directed by Edward Zwick
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Coca-Cola Bottle Evolution: Packaging History 1886–Present
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Romantic Monster: The Human Within
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Paper Undergraduate
Hitler's Flaws and the Failure of Operation Barbarossa
World War II – the Eastern Front History is often the story of one person's flaws afflicting whole populations. This truism was never truer than in World War II. A man obsessed with a messianic delusion fed off his personal foibles, rising to great power over a revitalized nation but then causing himself and that nation to crash in utter defeat. The greatest invasion on Earth was devised but ultimately doomed by this man: Hitler's prejudice, paranoia, and perplexity defeated the invasion of Russia, known as Barbarossa. Hitler's rabid prejudice against all non-Aryan people, including the people of Russia, was intense and costly. Deeming these people Untermenschen, or subhuman, Hitler simultaneously planned to oppress and exploit these "inferior" people while clearly underestimating their abilities to endure and ultimately defeat him. Hitler's paranoia was also a major factor in the failure of Barbarossa, for his distrust of his own generals led him to ignore their advice and experience, crippling Germany's military future through his unrealistic plan to defeat Russia in merely 4 weeks. Finally, once Hitler's forces were in Russia and initially victorious, Hitler was perplexed as to where exactly those forces should next be sent to completely conquer Russia. In a fatal display of hubris and thoughtlessness, Hitler split his forces, sending them north and south. This split resulted in the overextension of his forces and delays that pushed the invasion into the devastating Russian Winter. Spread thin and inadequately prepared for fighting through the extreme cold and snow of Russia, German forces suffered their greatest casualties and ultimately endured the failure of their massive invasion. As all consulted sources agree, German forces never recovered from the failure of Barbarossa. The concentration of German forces on this Eastern Front due to Hitler's obsession with conquering Russia caused the Germans to all but abandon the Battle of Britain, thus saving Britain from certain defeat. Furthermore, the defeat contributed to the mutual distrust between Hitler and his generals, crippling Germany's ability to effectively fight the War. Finally, the failure of Barbarossa weakened the Third Reich in aspects from which it never recovered, turning Germany's focus to the immense Eastern Front, overextending German forces and inflicting huge casualties on the Germans. Consequently, it can be reasonably concluded that Hitler's personal flaws directly resulted in the failure of Barbarossa and Germany's loss in World War II.