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Colonization
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Colonization refers to the process by which one society extends political, economic, and cultural control over another territory and its people. It appears across history curricula as a foundational subject because it shaped the modern world's borders, power structures, and social hierarchies. Students in history, political science, sociology, and social work courses engage with it because colonialism raises persistent questions about land, governance, culture, and identity — forces that continue to influence societies long after formal colonial rule ends. The psychological consequences of colonialism, the transformation of indigenous societies, and the restructuring of government and education systems all make this topic analytically rich and relevant across disciplines.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Geographic and regional case studies are common, examining colonization in Africa, Mexico, and Korea, as well as the experiences of Native Americans and Aboriginal communities. Some essays take a comparative angle, weighing how ethnic and religious identities shaped political outcomes in colonized societies. Others focus on economic dimensions, such as foreign direct investment in developing countries, or on cultural and social change through contact between colonizers and indigenous populations. Literary and biographical analysis also appears, with works like Wangari Maathai's Unbowed used to ground arguments about land, power, and resistance in personal narrative.

A strong essay on colonization begins with a focused thesis that connects a specific colonial context to a broader historical or theoretical claim — avoiding the pitfall of simply summarizing events without analyzing cause and effect. Evidence drawn from governmental structures, cultural disruption, or lived experience carries the most weight. Writers should be careful not to treat colonized peoples as passive subjects; acknowledging agency and resistance produces more accurate and compelling historical arguments.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Richard Allen and His Effect on African-American Lives
Richard Allen: A Biography and Historical Context
Research Paper Doctorate
Effect of Trade Slavery on Wes
¶ … million Africans were abducted forcibly from West Africa alone and enslaved (Centre for Black & African Arts & Civilisation, 2002, 1). This paper endeavours to explore the "impact of the slave trade on West Africa."…
Paper High School
Kuwaiti Student Identity: Globalization and Family Heritage
Having never asked my grandparents directly about our ancestry, there are few details that I know about my family genealogy. I am from Kuwait, a country that has seen more than its fair share of changes over the past…
Paper Doctorate
Debate of Cold War in the Origins of the Modern World
By definition, the term Cold War implies a state of no war and no peace between two opponents. It is the kind of international rivalry in which states use all types of measures (including political, economic, social, diplomatic, technical, military and paramilitary) to achieve national objectives, however, it avoids overt armed conflict. It is a jargon, which is generally used to denote tense relations between former USSR and US during the period 1947-1991. President Roosevelt conceived it during 1939-1941 when Second World War was still in progress, which reflects deep rooted animosity between US and USSR. The two countries fought war together as allies against a common enemy, Nazi Germany, but the hostility against each other never died down. It re emerged as soon as the end of War was in sight.
Thesis High School
Caribbean Crossroads of the World Art Pieces
. The current exhibition Caribbean: Crossroads of the World provides a complex view of the people of the Caribbean and, just as importantly, a view of these peoples as they have spread across the world in their own historic and cultural diaspora, taking with them their unique experiences and outlooks even as they became the A current art exhibit explores how Caribbeans remain a subject of fascination to other people who see the fertility of the islands in dual ways, both as the sexuality available of the women and the fertility of the land itself. Both of these views are a holdover from colonialism.
Essay Undergraduate
Gender Religion and Social Relations in the Mediterranean
This is a three page paper with analyses and summaries of the following articles, plus three questions each about each article: Marc Baer. "Islamic Conversion Narratives of Women: Social Change and Gendered Religious Hierarchy in Early Modern Ottoman Istanbul." Gender & History 16, no. 2 (2004): 425-458. James Grehan. "Smoking and ‘Early Modern Sociability: The Great Tobacco Debate in the Ottoman Middle East." The American Historical Review 111, no. 5 (2006): 1352-1377. Emma Loosley. Ladies who Lounge: Class, Religion, and Social Interaction in Seventeenth-Century Isfahan." Gender & History 23, no. 3 (2011): 615-629. Allyson M. Poska. Babies on Board: Women, Children, and Imperial Policy in the Spanish Empire. Gender & History, Vol.22, no.2 August 2010, pp. 269–283.
Research Paper Doctorate
Chinchua Achebe\'s Things Fall Apart
¶ … Chinchua Achebe's Things Fall Apart is a story about many things, but primarily about a man trying to hold his family and life together in Nigeria during the time of colonization.
Research Paper Doctorate
Causes of the disappearance of the ancient Mayan civilization
The disappearance of the Mayan Civilization: socio-cultural or climatic collapse?
Paper Undergraduate
Religious and secular influence in Europe
This essay argues that religious authority was more influential between 1500 and 1900, even though the Enlightenment attempted to overcome religion with reason. By examining texts from each of the centuries discussed, it is possible to chart the evolution of religious authority and see how it transferred from a priestly class to the wider populace. This distribution of power shielded religion from effective criticism and allowed it to retain its influence despite the rise of science and reason.
Research Paper Doctorate
Blauner\'s Hypothesis and the Hispanics\'
In Bob Blauner's "Still the Big News: Racial Oppression in America," he discussed his hypothesis regarding racial oppression in American society, citing, in particular, the Negro experience.