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Barack Obama
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Barack Obama's presidency and political career have become central subjects in political science, American history, rhetoric, and social justice courses. His 2008 election as the first African American president marked a significant moment in American political history, raising questions about race, representation, and the evolving nature of democratic campaigns. Scholars and students examine his candidacy and presidency through frameworks such as deracialization in post–civil rights movement politics, the rhetoric of national unity seen in speeches like "A More Perfect Union," and the broader ideology of change he campaigned on. These dimensions make Obama a productive subject for academic analysis across multiple disciplines.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of analytical approaches. Some take a comparative angle, placing Obama directly against John McCain to evaluate policy positions, experience, and campaign strategy. Others focus on rhetorical analysis, examining how Obama constructed arguments about national identity and social justice for specific audiences. Historical and ideological approaches appear as well, situating his rise within the post–civil rights movement and connecting his messaging to figures like Martin Luther King Jr. A smaller number of papers address specific policy questions his presidency raised, such as government intervention in industries like General Motors.

A strong essay on Barack Obama benefits from a focused thesis that commits to one clear dimension — rhetoric, electoral politics, racial identity, or policy — rather than treating his entire career as the subject. Evidence drawn from primary sources such as speeches and campaign materials carries particular weight. The most common pitfall is allowing broad admiration or criticism to substitute for argument; effective papers engage specific claims about Obama's political significance and support them with concrete textual or historical evidence.

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Paper Undergraduate
Negotiation concepts and strategies
A process of communication by which parties attempt to resolve a dispute between them ("Short Glossary" n.d.).
Paper High School
Personal agency across multiple interpretations
This paper is a personal essay describing an individual's growth. The essay incorporates readings from a course in globalization that focuses on the importance of developing a multifaceted personality. The author of the essay began life as a privileged member of Mexico's wealthy upper class and then moved to the United States in order to seek an education.
Paper Doctorate
Afro Americans Poverty Among Afro Americans America
America has always been at the top in the counting of developed countries all over the world. In the past 50 years, the rate of poverty has somehow declined but one can say that it is only for a specified circle of society (Carrillo, 2012). The poverty rate fluctuated around 22.4% to 15.11 % in the past 50 years (Iceland, 2012). Although the ratio has decreased but it's a considerable rate for country like USA. Here the question which is under consideration is the poverty rate of those Africans who have been living there for a very long time but they are the most under privileged community of this society as depicted by the researches and reports every year.
Paper Doctorate
Washington Rules: America\'s Path to Permanent War
Washington Rules: America's Path to Permanent War Washington rules: America's path to permanent war is an indictment of the Washington consensus that positions the U.S. as the World's Big Brother and Policeman. Commencing with the Truman Administration, Bacevich traces the birth, development and maintenance of the Washington consensus built on a credo in which the United States alone must "lead, save, liberate, and ultimately transform the world," along with the "trinity" of global military presence, global power projection and global interventionism. Based on these two elements of credo and trinity, along with the complacency of the American people, the United States has spread its military might around the globe in a so-called "flexible response" thrusting us "into a condition approximating perpetual war" that is costing the country dearly in human and nonhuman resources. Bacevich then suggests solutions in the form of a new credo in which the United States becomes a model of the ideals set forth in our Constitution and Declaration of Independence. He also suggests a new trinity in which America shifts from: a large professional military constantly prepared for war to more of a citizen-warrior force; use of our military for world domination to use of the military for defense and vital interests only; global occupation to withdrawal from areas in which the cost clearly outweighs the benefit. Bacevich's book is widely praised, though problems have been noted. Though chiefly praising Bacevich's book, Gary J. Bass takes issue with: at least one of Bacevich's severe analogies between our policymakers and possibly Hitler; Bacevich's exclusion of examples in which American leaders and the American public acted against the foregone conclusion of the Washington consensus. Gerard De Groot also praises Bacevich's book but believes that Bacevich's belief that the American public can change the current situation is too optimistic. In addition to the criticisms posed by Bass and De Groot, it appears that Bacevich's suggestion of eliminating our large, well-armed professional military is an invitation to a disaster that we were fortunate to miss during World War II. Finally, Bacevich's suggestion of defense-only and vital interest-only use of our military raises significant issues about what constitutes "defense" and "vital interest," as well as the important issue of who will decide what constitutes "defense" and "vital interest." In sum, Bacevich's book raises important perspectives and historical examples that compel the reader to examine and challenge the current Washington consensus; however, the book is also somewhat flawed and/or incomplete.
Paper Undergraduate
Social media platforms and their effects on communication
The Emergence of New Communications Media
Paper Undergraduate
Niebuhr Reinhold Niebuhr if There
If there is one word to describe Reinhold Niebuhr it would have to be "realist." As the founder of Christian Realism Theology, Niebuhr was what one could describe as the ultimate realist.
Essay Doctorate
Comparing excellent and flawed leadership in business, politics, and family contexts
Effective leadership is hardly a matter of chance or luck. It constitutes some sound competencies and traits which every leader must either possess naturally or acquire during his career. Leaders are expected to have major essential competencies in five areas namely, Analytical, Positional, Personal, Communication and Organizational. Not every leader may possess all these but they are widely desired based on literature review and hence a leader lacking any of these might face serious problems.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Authenticity and integrity in competitive contexts
The book by Katherine S. Newman, who is an anthropologist, shows that many of the portraits painted of the inner city by journalists and social scientists are at best incomplete and at worst flat wrong.
Paper Doctorate
Minorities in the United States
Discuss the importance of Native American sovereignty in the 21st century to both the indigenous populations as well as the general population of the U.S.A.
Essay Doctorate
Malware Attacks the Democratic Process Once Upon
Once upon a time, a candidate had to excel at kissing babies and stump speeches. These were the major ways in which the candidate got his -- or much less frequently her -- image out to voters.