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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 Doctorate
Women's Education Rights: America, Britain, and Ireland
¶ … woman's rights were little recognized. As a creative source of human life, she was confined to the home as a wife and mother. Moreover, she was considered intellectually, emotionally and spiritually inferior to man…
Research Paper Doctorate
Political Science Politics Can Very Well Be
Politics can very well be defined as the study of who gets what, when and how? The principal reason for such a definition is that politics conflicts between the demands for certain satisfaction and this conflict…
Paper Doctorate
English essay topics and writing approaches
America Does Not Take Education Seriously
Paper Doctorate
Constitutional Structures: United States vs. Canada Compared
Constitutional Structures of U.S. And Canada
Essay Undergraduate
Internet Service Provider (ISP) Web Content Law
The objective of this work is to answer whether Internet service providers have a responsibility to regulate the content that is available on the World Wide Web? This work will additionally answer as to whether the presence and ease of availability of pornography to the general public a tribute to free speech and a reflection of social maturity or an example of the potential damage that unregulated markets and the hegemony of technology have reaped upon society?
Paper Doctorate
Unruly Americans and the Origins of the Constitution
This paper discusses the book Unruly Americans by Woody Horton. In the text, the author takes considerable pains to explore how the Founding Fathers created the Articles of Confederation and then the Constitution. He also explains how it is that the average citizens, the farmers were responsible for the success of the United States of America.
Essay Doctorate
Democracy / Liberty Is Direct Democracy Desirable
Is direct democracy desirable and/or possible today? The question is addressed first theoretically, with reference to Montesquieu's Spirit of the Laws, which actually categorizes direct democracy as one of the corruptions into which a democratic system can descend, by an insistence on too much egalitarianism. Direct democracy is considered as an ideal, which is desirable insofar as it offers a critique of contemporary politics, but whose possibility is limited by whether or not it can be feasibly implemented. Two contemporary case studies are brought in to examine the question further: the experiment with internet-organized direct democracy in Estonia, and the experiment with social-media-inspired direct democracy in the Occupy Wall Street movement. Paper then offers an answer to a second essay question about conceptions of freedom in contemporary liberal democracy.
Paper Undergraduate
Voice of freedom: historical perspectives and social impact
This essay discusses the issue of being free towards the end of the civil war. For example, t mentioned in this chapter how 1831 was the turning point for the south. The turning point involved the fact that people wanted to see the slaves freed and that sparked that new level of vision for the slaves.
Paper Masters
Federalism and Social Security
This essay clearly identifies a specific federal policy (the policy must raise issues of federalism because it requires national, state, and local interaction and invites tension across different levels of government), and summarizes the elements of the policy, including the problem it is supposed to solve or improve. Summarizes the history of the policy and how it relates to federalism.
Research Paper Doctorate
US Colonization of Philippines
The Philippines historically suffered under Spanish rule prior to its annexation by the United States. However, American colonization of the region, while pledged to be altruistic, proved to support a hidden agenda of…