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Constitutional Law
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Constitutional law examines the foundational legal principles that define governmental authority and protect individual rights. It appears across law school curricula, political science programs, and public policy courses because it sits at the center of how democratic societies organize power and resolve conflicts between citizens and the state. The U.S. Supreme Court serves as the primary interpreter of constitutional meaning, making its decisions essential reading for anyone studying how the Constitution shapes criminal procedure, property rights, civil liberties, and due process. The field is academically rich because constitutional questions rarely have simple answers — they require balancing competing rights, historical interpretation, and evolving social values.

Student papers on this topic approach constitutional law from several directions. Many focus on criminal procedure, particularly Fourth Amendment protections governing arrest and search and seizure, and how courts define the boundaries of lawful police conduct. Others take a policy and case-study approach, examining issues such as eminent domain, habeas corpus in the context of the war on terror, and immigration. Some papers use comparative analysis to contrast different judicial approaches, while others engage in rights-based argumentation, exploring how the legal system has addressed — or failed to address — the rights of defendants, crime victims, and historically marginalized populations. Communication law, invasion of privacy, and free expression cases like cross burning also appear as analytical subjects.

A strong constitutional law essay builds its thesis around a specific legal question rather than broadly summarizing doctrine. Court opinions, constitutional text, and statutory frameworks carry the most analytical weight as evidence. The most common pitfall is treating Supreme Court rulings as final or uniform without accounting for dissenting opinions and the way doctrine shifts across different cases and eras.

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Paper High School
Political leadership inspired by thematic principles
This is a three page paper. It is about Abraham Lincoln from a leadership perspective. The prompt for the essay is "Abraham Lincoln chose to do what was right, rather than what was expedient." The essay is organized and focused, and mentions things like the Civil War, constitutional leadership, slavery, freedom, and the creation of a "more perfect union." The Gettysburg Address is cited.
Research Paper Doctorate
Two Views on Court\'s Ruling
¶ … court ruling 'Two Views on Court's Ruling" (2003) presents the differing opinions of legal analysts Douglas W. Kmiec and Alan Hirsh regarding the Massachusetts Supreme Court decision to extend the legal definition…
Research Paper Undergraduate
International Terrorism it Is Difficult
It is difficult to say that the United States has placed too much emphasis on the notion of jihad; given the very real, calculable effects that terrorism has had, not simply upon U.S.
Research Paper Doctorate
Unlawful Detention at Guantanamo Bay
In his book The Enemy Within, author Stephen J. Schulhofer notes, "In the two months following September 11, approximately 1200 foreign nationals living in the United States were arrested and detained by federal law…
Paper Undergraduate
Padilla v. Hanft on June
On June 10th, 2002, CNN.com reported that U.S. officials had "captured a U.S. citizen with suspected ties to al Qaeda who allegedly planned to build and explode a radioactive 'dirty bomb' in the United States."…
Essay Doctorate
Bill of Rights and Today\'s Criminal Justice
This paper analyzes a handful of the amendments in the Bill of Rights along with the 14th Amend. it then shows how they apply to the various agencies of law enforcement in the criminal justice system. It shows post-9/11 U.S. law enforcement has changed in spite of the amendments and decisions such as those passed down by the Warren Court concerning due process.
Paper Undergraduate
Public Sector Comparator Psc in Public Private Partnership PPP Process
Variations in the public-private partnership financing model of public sector infrastructure projects differs in each country. This research explores how these differences effect estimation of costs using the Public Sector Comparator and Value for Money models of cost analysis. It supports the need for consistent guidelines.
Paper Doctorate
Judicial Dictatorship This Report Serves
The book Judicial Dictatorship makes the assertion that the current form and function of the Judicial Branch of the United States Federal Government has far exceed the scope, depth and breadth of what the founders intended and their general practice of judicial review and potentially overturning duly passed laws is a perfect example of that.
Essay Doctorate
Survey methodology: in-person, telephone, and computer-assisted approaches
Research Survey Questions - Answers Research Survey Question 1: should police officers have discretion when dealing with domestic violence? Answer: YES with qualifications. An in-person survey might work best here because citizens don't all see police as protectors of society; some see them as threats. Discretion is lately recognized as a "necessary evil" according to the police science faculty at North Carolina Wesleyan College (ncwc.edu). Discretion can be put to effective use in a domestic violence situation when it is "structured properly" but on the other hand there is a potential for the "abuse of discretion" when poor choices are made by the officers involved in the dispute (ncwc.edu). Discretion "as judgment" is the exact opposite of "routine and habitual obedience," according to ncwc.edu; police do not follow exact, precise orders like soldiers are obliged to – they "…must adapt…rules to local circumstances" because every instance of domestic abuse is unique in some meaningful way (ncwc.edu).
Research Paper Doctorate
Interview methods and practices
Interview Subject 1 - NYPD Detective Sergeant: