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Citizenship
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Citizenship is a foundational concept in political science, government, and social studies courses because it sits at the intersection of legal status, civic identity, and belonging. Students are asked to examine what it means to be a citizen, who gets to claim that status, and what obligations and rights follow from it. The topic draws on historical models, such as Athenian governance and its principles of selection and representation, as well as contemporary debates about naturalization processes, amnesty for undocumented workers, and the particular legal position of communities like those in Guam navigating U.S. citizenship. Works such as Danielle Allen's Talking to Strangers also invite students to consider how citizens relate to one another across difference within a shared society.

Papers on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some are comparative, examining inclusion and exclusion across different systems or contrasting the role of the individual in society across political traditions. Others are historical, tracing what civil rights meant in postwar America or how naturalization procedures have evolved. Case-study approaches appear as well, with papers focusing on specific communities, workplace diversity, or the relationship between professional sports teams and community cohesion. Policy-oriented essays address questions of immigration reform and civic responsibility directly.

A strong essay on citizenship needs a clearly bounded thesis — arguing what citizenship should mean, or analyzing why a specific policy or definition succeeds or fails, rather than simply describing the concept. Legal texts, historical precedents, and political theory carry the most analytical weight as evidence. The most common pitfall is treating citizenship as a fixed, universal category rather than acknowledging that its terms are contested and have changed significantly across time and context.

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Affirmative Action in the Workplace
Human Resource Management Issues -- Affirmative Action
Paper Undergraduate
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Essay Doctorate
Gender, colonialism, and social change in Kenya
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Research Paper Doctorate
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The focus of this report is on catering within the food industry. The history of catering and a great deal of the history of the food industry in America are simply taken for granted.
Research Paper Doctorate
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Research Paper Doctorate
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Research Paper Doctorate
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Essay Doctorate
African-Americans in Major Historical Events Although African-Americans
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Friedrich Engels Biography Friedrich Engels
Friedrich Engels is described by Terrell Carver (2003) as a man involved in one of the most famous intellectual collaborations of all time (p. 1). That collaboration, as we now know, was the political ideology of…