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Boat
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About This Topic

The topic of boats appears across a surprisingly wide range of academic disciplines, from literature and history to business law and public health. Because boats function as settings, symbols, vehicles of tragedy, and subjects of commercial enterprise, they attract attention in courses covering everything from environmental studies to corporate case analysis. The recurring keywords — incident, harm, duties, and case — suggest that the subject often anchors discussions of responsibility, risk, and human decision-making rather than serving as a purely technical focus.

The archived student papers approach boats from notably varied angles. Some take a literary or comparative direction, examining naturalism in narrative settings or drawing connections between authors like Langston Hughes and Tennessee Williams. Others adopt a case-study framework, as seen in the Craft Marine Corporation analysis, which grounds abstract business and law principles in a concrete industry context. Incident-based writing also appears, with papers like the Finger Lakes tragedy piece suggesting narrative or journalistic approaches to analyzing events involving watercraft and their consequences.

A strong essay on this topic begins by establishing a focused thesis — whether the boat is a legal subject, a literary device, or the site of a real-world incident, the argument should be specific rather than broadly descriptive. Evidence that carries weight includes primary sources, direct textual analysis, legal precedent, or documented case details depending on the discipline. The most common pitfall is treating the boat itself as the subject when the real argument concerns the human actions, duties, or consequences surrounding it — keeping that distinction clear will sharpen any essay significantly.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Handling Fear of Success Through Positive Psychology
Perhaps we are blinded to the survival value of positive emotions precisely because they are so important. Like the fish who is unaware of the water in which it swims, we take for granted a certain amount of hope, love,…
Research Paper Doctorate
Overview of Canadian history
Precis: W.J. Eccles, "Society and the Frontier."
Research Paper Doctorate
When Where and How Is Computer Technology Best Used in the Design Process
The Design Process of a Forty-Five Foot Sailing Boat'
Research Paper Doctorate
Old Man and the Sea
Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway is marvelous piece of writing basically because of its lucidity and simplicity. Yet the story contains important messages and philosophies, which can only be read between the…
Paper Undergraduate
Autism spectrum disorder: characteristics, diagnosis, and treatment approaches
Three studies on autism spectrum disorders or reviewed: Dawson et al., Rate of head growth decelerates and symptoms worsen in the second year of life in autism; Konig et al,. Prevalence of parent-reported diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder among children in the US, 2007; and Oberman & Ramachandran, The simulating social mind: the role of the mirror neuron system and simulation in the social and communicative deficits of autism spectrum disorders.
Essay Doctorate
Living on a Lifeboat by Garrett Hardin
Word Count (excluding titles and footnotes: 1860)
Research Paper Doctorate
The role of setting in Eveline
Leaving for an unfamiliar territory: Reinforcing Eveline's fear through setting in "Eveline" by James Joyce
Essay Doctorate
Marshall Executive Brief #3 Trade Policy Greece
This paper is about foreign exchange and international trade. The prompt relates to General Mills and its operations in Greece and France. So there is discussion of FX risk (or lack thereof), and of the impacts of the common market on trade between these two countries. There are some sections speculating about the nature of the international operations of this company.
Thesis Undergraduate
Business Fraud in the Wake of Scandals
The paper focuses on the example of Wasendorf, whose 20-year fraudulent activities were finally brought to light by a suicide note. Points considered include whether similar future activities can be prevented, what caused the fraud to be possible, and whether the punishment fit the crime. It is concluded that Wasendorf should indeed pay the price for his actions, but that regulatory authorities should also be under investigation.
Paper Undergraduate
Police response to terrorist attacks in Oslo and Utøya Island, Norway
This essay refers to the Norway attacks of 2011. A couple of weeks ago the report of the inquiry into the twin terrorist attack by Anders Breivik, which left 77 people dead, was released. The report is highly critical of the response by the police (see the report at http://www.norway-nato.org/eng/News/22-July-Commissions-report/). It has already led to the resignation of the Police Chief (See http://www.trtenglish.com/trtworld/en/newsDetail.aspx?HaberKodu=e6cf982c-1817-4e63-addd-cf74b3c42ad8) and a major review of the police and other services has been announced. For the ABC news report see http://www.radioaustralia.net.au/international/2012-08-13/breivik-could-have-been-arrested-sooner-report/998506. The report on this incident is thorough, and scathing, and arguably shows heightened expectations of police leadership and response to terrorist attack in the post 9/11 era. Using this incident analyse the effectiveness of the response of the Police response in conjunction with emergency services and other key stakeholders. Critically discuss the response of the key command personnel involved in terms of their operational effectiveness. This essay should HIGHLIGHT the command challenges this event presented, operational opportunities that arose and practical opportunities commanders had available to mitigate the impact of those factors.