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Criticism
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Criticism as an academic topic appears across a wide range of disciplines, including literature, business, political science, history, and cultural studies. It functions both as a method — a structured way of evaluating ideas, texts, policies, or figures — and as a subject of inquiry in its own right. What makes it academically interesting is its dual nature: criticism can be a tool for advancing knowledge and improving institutions, or it can be examined as a social and rhetorical act shaped by ideology, power, and context. Courses in composition, cultural theory, organizational management, and political analysis all treat criticism as a concept worth understanding deeply.

The papers collected here reflect a genuinely broad range of approaches. Some take a comparative and rhetorical angle, examining different methods of criticism side by side. Others apply critical frameworks to specific figures or movements, such as assessments of political leadership, explorations of criticism and self-criticism within German Modernism, or evaluations of economic policy through a lens like McMillan's criticism of gradualism. Still others use criticism instrumentally, scrutinizing business strategy, competitive forces, organizational redesign, or professional standards in fields like accounting.

A strong essay on criticism begins with a clearly scoped thesis that identifies what kind of criticism is being examined and what standard of judgment is being applied. Evidence drawn from primary texts, historical records, or documented outcomes tends to carry the most weight. One common pitfall is conflating personal opinion with structured critical analysis — effective academic criticism requires explicit criteria and consistent application of those criteria throughout the argument.

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Essay Doctorate
Managing identification and planning in change practice settings
This chapter discusses the management and planning of change process within the clinical setting. Change management plan is very critical to the success of any healthcare unit. Change may be threatening to…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Woodrow Wilson How Did Woodrow
How did Woodrow Wilson exemplify neutrality, expansionism and exceptionalism?
Paper Undergraduate
Organizational Behavior How Motivation Influences
Using a practical level of studying and explaining motivation, assistant business professor and journalist Steven a. Murphy explains why all organizations should - and most good ones do - seek the next generation of…
Research Paper Doctorate
Trade Act of 1974 on Euro Exchange
¶ … Trade Act of 1974 on Euro exchange rates?
Paper Doctorate
Conceptual foundations and applications of cost-benefit analysis in energy economics
This paper is on energy economics and cost and benefit analysis. The basic conceptual framework underlying the cost and benefit analysis is ‘allocative efficiency'. Apart from allocative there are other conceptual frameworks, such as ‘Pareto Efficiency', which also underlie the concept of cost and benefit analysis. (MacGeorge 2009) The major conceptual foundations that underlie the process of cost and benefit analysis are listed below;
Essay Doctorate
What SAP Won't Tell You About Business Intelligence Systems
What SAP didn't tell you about creating and using business intelligence, and why
Research Paper Undergraduate
Siege Is a 1972 Film
¶ … Siege is a 1972 film by Costa-Gavras, the famous Greek-French film-maker, about the interrogation and assassination of a CIA case officer by unnamed South American urban revolutionaries.
Paper Doctorate
Theorising society and social structures
This author has found the Durkheim text on the Division of Labor to be most interesting. Durkheim has introduced a Hegelian dichotomy that is contradictory, yet binary at the same time.
Research Paper Doctorate
Leaders Handling Anger and Conflict
Anger Management and Conflict in the Workplace
Paper Undergraduate
North-South issues and development assistance
Consider a textbook Heckscher-Ohlin model, with two countries (North and South), two factors (skilled and unskilled labour), and two goods (skill-intensive and labour-intensive manufactures). The North is more abundantly endowed with skilled labour: it has a larger (inelastic) supply of skilled, relative to unskilled, workers than the South. Both sorts of workers are mobile between sectors within each country, but internationally immobile. The North thus has a comparative advantage in the production of the skill-intensive good, which needs a higher ratio of skilled to unskilled workers than the labour-intensive good. And vice versa for the South.