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Court Case
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Court cases serve as foundational study material across law, criminal justice, political science, and pre-law programs. They offer students a structured way to examine how legal systems translate abstract principles into binding decisions. Because every case involves facts, procedural history, applicable law, and reasoned judgment, analyzing them develops skills central to legal education: close reading of evidence, understanding of rights, and evaluation of how courts balance competing interests. Topics ranging from contract disputes and tax liability to habeas corpus petitions and plea bargaining all find their expression through the court case framework, making it one of the most versatile and widely assigned subjects in legal study.

The papers archived here reflect a broad range of approaches. Some focus on case briefs, breaking down specific rulings such as Schroerlucke v. United States or contract disputes under the Uniform Commercial Code into their core components: facts, issues, holdings, and reasoning. Others take a comparative angle, setting prosecution against defense roles or examining how plea bargaining shapes sentencing outcomes. Still others extend into policy and institutional contexts, addressing topics like reverse discrimination in the workplace, corrections and gangs, and international commercial arbitration through bodies such as the Dubai International Arbitration Centre.

A strong essay on a court case begins with a clearly scoped thesis that moves beyond summarizing facts toward arguing how a ruling matters legally or socially. Evidence drawn from court records, statutory text, and procedural details carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating a case brief as an endpoint rather than a starting point — description alone is not analysis, and examiners expect students to connect legal outcomes to broader principles, rights, or real-world consequences.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Apology by Plato
Rejecting the Law and Accepting the Consequences
Essay Doctorate
Brannigan\'s Moral Reasoning Applied to a Specific
Using Brannigan's six steps to moral reasoning, the situation involving the business man, his wife, and her lover can be broken down and analyzed from a moral perspective in order to arrive at an agreed upon moral option.
Research Paper Doctorate
Criminal justice systems and contemporary practices
The problem of how to treat and processing juvenile offenders through the court system has been an issue before the establishment of the first juvenile court in 1899. Before it was recognized that minors needed their…
Paper Doctorate
Gary Ridgway: The Green River Killer Case and DNA Evidence
This is a report conducted regarding the events that led to the capture of the Green River Killer, Gary Ridgeway. The fact that forensic science was initially lacking the means to convict him, did not stop police from collectign valuable evidnence in 1987 that led to his internment in 2001. The efforts of the police and the scientists led to the capture of the most prolific serial murderer in US history.
Research Paper Doctorate
Race, Crime, and the Law
In Race, Crime, and the Law, Harvard law professor Randall Kennedy takes an in depth look at how issues of race link with crime and law enforcement. Kennedy investigates the system from the viewpoint that race is a…
Essay Doctorate
Determining and quantifying tasks in procurement contract closure processes
All contracts have to be drawn up and executive in a diligent and proper manner but procurement contracts in particular have their own special challenges and such that make them unique. However, the proper standards and best practices are all out there and should be consulted and followed. However, avoiding a cookie-cutter approach is also wise.
Paper Undergraduate
Mooting assessment and problem solving
The paper creates the understanding of the Unfair Contract Terms Act (UCTA) 1977 by considering various cases and sections of statutes. The paper provides arguments that indicate term (C) as unreasonable under the UCTA 1977. It provides conditions in which the contractual terms bind the two persons, for example, signing the contract.
Research Paper Doctorate
Federal Judicial Branch of Government
The delegates to the Constitutional Convention of 1787 in Philadelphia were aware that the new nation needed to be quite different from the English structure of government they had broken away from in a bloody war, so…
Paper Doctorate
Human resources in corporations and employee relations
The essay is about ‘employment at will'. The articles deal with the problematic situation of a dedicated employee who has been for many years loyally and diligently serving a particular company. Along comes a new boss and demands her retirement on the basis of factors such as age, gender, or other elements that he feels are detrimental to the profile of his company. The question at hand, therefore, is: is it ethical to ‘sack' this employee on the grounds of these elements alone? Shouldn't the employee be given the opportunity, perhaps, to upgrade his skills before he be abruptly dismissed? Long term relationships demand reciprocity and consideration. Shouldn't the same be here too?
Essay Doctorate
International Disputes When Business Internationally Issues Settling
When two companies are engaged in a dispute, the legal complications can become extremely difficult to resolve if the involved parties are both from different nations. The question of which laws apply will arise. This paper suggests that arbitration versus litigation, is frequently a more effective way of resolving disputes and overcoming cultural and legal obstacles to agreement.