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Constitution
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The Constitution stands as one of the most examined documents in American political and legal history, making it a central subject in history, political science, law, and civics courses. Students write about it because it raises enduring questions about the balance of power, the protection of individual rights, and the relationship between citizens and their government. Its origins in the turbulent period following the Articles of Confederation, the debates surrounding its ratification, and its ongoing interpretation through amendments and Supreme Court decisions give it layers of complexity that reward sustained academic attention.

The papers collected here approach the Constitution from several distinct angles. Some take a historical perspective, examining the political pressures of the mid-1780s that drove delegates toward a new framework, or asking whether the document represented a counter-revolution or a national salvation. Others focus on legal and structural analysis, tracing how amendments shape the broader legal system or how federal power is distributed through federalism. Case-focused essays use specific Supreme Court decisions and cases such as Ruiz v. Estelle to ground constitutional principles in concrete legal outcomes. A smaller number of papers place the Constitution in comparative or thematic contexts alongside topics like secular humanism or revolutionary America.

A strong essay on the Constitution requires a focused thesis that moves beyond description toward an interpretive claim about power, rights, or legitimacy. Evidence drawn from the text of amendments, congressional authority, and documented legal precedent carries the most weight in historical and legal arguments. The most common pitfall is treating the Constitution as a static document rather than one continuously reshaped by political conflict, court interpretation, and the evolving relationship between citizens and federal government.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
Democracy in Iran and Afghanistan
The United States is one of the world's most successful, stable, and long-lasting democracies. As such, lessons learned from the democracy in the United States may be helpful in emerging democracies.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Constitutional frameworks and principles
The framers of the Constitution included the purpose to "form a more perfect union" in the Constitution because the system of government established in the Articles of Confederation failed to unify the states into a…
Paper Undergraduate
Inception in Its Present Form
¶ … inception in its present form in 1998, the Bowl Championship Series (BCS) has been used to select the national champion in college football. The BCS is made up of the six big conferences in NCAA Div-I, and the five…
Paper Undergraduate
Visual Culture and Environment America\'s
America's cultural propensity to act, look and think of itself as the protector of the free world is perpetuated by hundreds of cultural practices, viewed with more or less distaste by various nations of the world and…
Paper Doctorate
Research topic and abstract summary
The philosophical and political system known as democracy, at least as it is typically used, came from an Ancient Greek concept of popular government (not a true democracy at the time, because only free men could vote).
Paper Undergraduate
Federalism and intergovernmental relations
This paper discusses the desirability or undesirability of the federal government's intrusion into local functions, such as the police, education and public works projects. It also presents the reason why local affairs should remain local. It offers suggestions on how this can be done. It is the work of Congress to make the difference.
Paper Undergraduate
Smallpox in the Revolutionary War
The disease that caused the most serious problems during the Revolutionary War in America was smallpox. There were other diseases that afflicted the soldiers, but nothing took the terrible toll that smallpox did.
Paper Undergraduate
Founding Brothers Ellis, Joseph, J. Founding Brothers:
This is a review of The Founding Brothers by Joseph Ellis. The paper notes that Ellis tried to recount the lives of the founders of the American republic to make an argument about the character of the nation. The virtues and the faults of the founders became part of the Constitutional spirit, he argues. Ellis neither worships the founders nor does he see them in a negative light.
Paper Doctorate
Employment Rights Compared: Nigeria vs. the UK
Comparison Between Rights and Employment in Nigeria and in the UK
Research Paper Undergraduate
the american presidency
¶ … American Presidency by McDonald takes a strong stand against the executive branch gaining too much power over the other branches of government. His basic thesis is that this Constitutional government is brilliantly…