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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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Essay Doctorate
Looking at Civil War and Lincoln
¶ … Abraham Lincoln expanded the presidential powers at the time of the American Civil War.
Essay Doctorate
The New World the Rise of American Hypocrisy
Edwards' "Sinners in the Hands of an Angry God" set the tone for the kind of religious liberty that the Protestants/Puritans sought in America: all for them, none for the Catholics or the Native Americans.
Paper Undergraduate
Use of Advanced Nurses to Improve Healthcare Access
Healthcare is one of those industries and fields of work where the promotion of innovation and change management is key. It is also one of those fields where managing that change through tried-and-true practices such as…
Essay Doctorate
Contemporary Japanese political system, culture, and government structure
¶ … Second World War, Japan was a traditional absolute monarchy but since the adoption of a new constitution in 1946, Japan has become a constitutional monarchy in which the emperor serves as symbolic head of state and…
Essay Undergraduate
Distortion of the American Dream
Disillusionment and the Harlem Renaissance and Post-Modernism
Essay Doctorate
Responses to Economic Recession to Help Homeowners
BAILOUT OF WALL STREET VS. THE INDIVIDUAL HOMEOWNER BAILOUT
Essay High School
The 17th Amendment: Direct Election of Senators Explained
17th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution was ratified in 1913. It altered the way in which Senators of the Congress were elected. Previously, under Article 1 of the Constitution, it was the state legislature's…
Essay Doctorate
Courts and Their Role in Society
The author of this report is tasked with discussing whether courts can help solve complex problems. Of course, the guiding documents and many of the amendments to the United States Constitution were written a century or…
Paper Masters
Analyzing the Hearsay and the Sixth Amendment’s Confrontation Clause
The main objective of the American constitutional provision under study was: prevention of ex-parte affidavit deposition, which was employed against prisoners in place of personal questioning and cross-questioning of…
Paper Undergraduate
Four Questions About Terrorism and Intelligence
¶ … intelligence operations. What role would state and local police play in these operations? What are the limits on their role?