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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
How Revolutionary Was the American Revolution?
¶ … revolutionary the American Revolution was in reality. This is one issue that has been debated on by many experts in the past and in the present too. The contents of this paper serve to justify this though-provoking…
Research Paper Doctorate
Marcus Garvey and the Pan-African movement
Marcus Garvey was the central figure in, perhaps, the largest African-American movement in United States history. He stood as the most outspoken proponent of the notion that Africans should return to Africa and start…
Research Paper Doctorate
Historical methodology: approaches and principles
¶ … discloses to the reader something of what happened during the era under discussion. But it also reveals at least as much about the era in which the history was written. What is considered significant enough to…
Research Paper Doctorate
Europe's role and relationships with the world
The horror! The horror!" are the haunting last words spoken by Kurtz in both Joseph Conrad's 1902 novel Heart of Darkness and in Francis Ford Coppola's 1979 film production Apocalypse Now.
Paper Masters
Three themes in Shakespeare's The Tempest and Patrick Chamoiseau's Solibo Magnificent
this three-page essay compares three themes in Shakespeare's The Tempest and Chamoiseau's Solibo the Magnificent. the three themes include colonialism, language, and racism. These three themes are interconnected. A few outside sources in addition to the primary texts are included. Those sources include Montaigne, Michel de. "Of the Cannibals." 1580. Naipaul, V.S. The Middle Passage: The Caribbean Revisited. New York: Vintage Books, 1981.
Paper Doctorate
Big Enough to Be Inconsistent Book Review
Book Review of George Frederickson, Big Enough to Be Inconsistent: Abraham Lincoln Confronts Slavery and Race. Harvard University Press, 2008.
Research Paper Doctorate
Lord of Light Taraka\'s True
When the English invaded India (and other countries) and occupied for purposes of colonizing it, they cared nothing about the indigenous people who lived there. They put the "natives" to work to help them exploit the…
Research Paper Doctorate
Revolution concepts and historical significance
It maybe suggested that the American Revolution was inevitable. America was far from its colonial master, and unlike colonies in Africa (for example) most of the colonists were both here by choice and considered this…
Research Paper Doctorate
Chomsky the Linguist Noam Chomsky
The linguist Noam Chomsky views the government of the United States as a terrorist state for a number of reasons. According to the author, the only difference between a coercive diplomacy and terrorism is the power of…
Paper Undergraduate
Hawaiian History in From a Native Daughter,
In From a Native Daughter, Haunani-Kay Trask's purpose could not be clearer in that she has written a highly political and ideological work from a left-wing nationalist perspective that denounces the colonization of…