Essay Topic Hub

Birth Control
Essays

414+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

414 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

Birth control is a broad subject encompassing the methods, policies, and social movements surrounding contraception and reproductive decision-making. It appears across health, sociology, political science, history, and ethics courses because it sits at the intersection of medicine, personal autonomy, and public policy. The topic is academically rich precisely because it connects individual choices about pregnancy and family size to larger questions about women's rights, population dynamics, and the role of government in regulating private life. Its historical depth — spanning ancient contraceptive practices to modern political movements — gives students multiple entry points for serious analysis.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a genuinely wide range of approaches. Historical essays examine birth control practices in the ancient world and in ancient Rome, while policy-focused work addresses population control in China or the political and social effects of birth control in England. Some papers take a persuasive stance, arguing for or against access to contraception and abortion for teenagers or the general public. Others explore economic angles, such as whether birth control qualifies as a deductible medical expense, or medical angles tied to specific contraceptive products and pregnancy outcomes. This variety shows that the topic supports comparative, case-study, legislative, and argumentative frameworks equally well.

A strong essay on birth control benefits from a clearly scoped thesis that commits to one dimension — historical, ethical, medical, or policy-based — rather than trying to cover all of them at once. Evidence drawn from documented medical research, legislative history, or demographic data carries more weight than broad generalizations. The most common pitfall is conflating contraception with abortion without clearly defining how each term is being used, which can undermine an otherwise well-reasoned argument.

Sort by:
Essay Undergraduate
Sociology of HPV vaccine adoption and attitudes
This is a "viewpoint" paper that discusses the HPV vaccine. Whether this vaccine is safe and effective are both considered. In addition, the HPV vaccine is addressed from a sociological standpoint as it relates to a particular group (young women).
Paper Doctorate
Medical ethics: principles, applications, and contemporary issues
Compare and contrast the different types of moral reasoning (moral absolutism, moral objectivism, etc.). What are the benefits and burdens of each? Which is closest to your own view of morality and why?
Research Paper Undergraduate
Social and political effects of birth control in England
In England, there have been changes in the laws that govern birth control, just as there have been in many countries. In the early part of the 20th century family planning on a more deliberate level began to appear in…
Paper Doctorate
Trial Journal Entries Dear Journal,
This will be my first entry. I have begun to visit the Union County Courthouse in New Jersey to follow a murder trial that is taking place there.
Essay Doctorate
Historical developments expanding women's opportunities from 1865 to present
The sphere of women's work had been strictly confined to the domestic realm, prior to the Industrial Revolution. Social isolation, financial dependence, and political disenfranchisement characterized the female experience prior to the twentieth century. The suffrage movement was certainly the first sign of the dismantling of the institutionalization of patriarchy, followed by universal access to education, and finally, the civil rights movement. Opportunities for women have gradually unfolded since the suffrage movement. Although patriarchal social norms still hold sway in some situations, the isolation of women has long been outmoded in the West.
Paper Undergraduate
Human Population Growth Long Gone
Long gone are the times when the population was encouraged to procreate and as such produce future labor force. Since those periods, the nations have been faced with tremendous challenges, such as wars or famines.
Paper High School
Stem Cell Research and Yaz
Every woman has the right to make the decision that determines when she conceives a child. Yaz is one of millions of medications readily available on the market and as with all medications there is an inherent risk in…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Child Adoption Is a Process
Child adoption is a process sanctioned under the law which makes a new and permanent parent-child relationship. The proceeding of adoption is normally done in front of a Judge. And adoption confers on the parent who…
Research Paper Undergraduate
U.S. Government Interfere With Existing
¶ … U.S. government interfere with existing federal law that gives the decision to abort a child or not to abort the woman's along to make, in her own private way? The first point-of-view in this paper will be to answer…
Essay Undergraduate
Social Change Leadership and Advocacy for Ces and Human Services and Fostering Change
Improving social justice for women has been identified as one of the building blocks of social change. Population control, education, and the eradication of domestic violence are all interlinked.