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Critique
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About This Topic AI GENERATED

A critique is a structured form of academic writing that evaluates the strengths, weaknesses, and overall effectiveness of a source, argument, or work. It appears across disciplines — from English and philosophy to social policy, business, and film studies — because the ability to assess and respond to existing ideas is fundamental to academic thinking. Courses that assign critiques push students beyond summary, asking them to engage with an author's purpose, methods, and reasoning on their own terms. Topics ranging from moral philosophy, such as arguments about moral minima, to management practices and social policy toward Aboriginal peoples in Canada all demand the same core skill: reading critically and articulating a reasoned, evidence-based judgment.

The papers archived under this topic take a wide range of approaches, reflecting how broadly the critique form is applied. Some papers offer literary or philosophical analysis, evaluating arguments made by thinkers like Karl Marx and his critique of Hegel's theory of the state, or assessing moral criticisms of the market. Others take a case-study approach, examining specific institutions or films such as the documentary on Walmart's business practices or the management of Thorpe Park. Still others focus on research evaluation, critiquing quantitative articles, literature reviews, or online sources like Convention and Visitor Bureau websites.

A strong critique begins with a clearly scoped thesis that goes beyond "this is good or bad" to explain why and how. Evidence typically comes from close reading of the source itself — examining the author's stated purpose, the clarity of key terms, the logic of the argument, and the quality of supporting material. The most common pitfall is spending too much of the essay summarizing rather than evaluating, which leaves the actual critique underdeveloped.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Living constitutionalism: interpretation and evolution
The work focuses on Living Constitutionalism. The concept ‘Living Constitutionalism' revolves around humanizing the law. The Constitution of the United States came into force on September 17, 1787 following its adoption by the Constitutional Convention in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania The concept ‘Living Constitutionalism' revolves around humanizing the law. By adding the element of humanity in the law, the constitution gains a dynamic element. This idea relates to the view of the society as contemporaneous, which introduces the need for rational interpretation of key provisions in the constitutional dispensation. The conclusion details the overall aspects discuss use and issue relevant solutions
Paper Doctorate
Family law and surrogacy
The issue of commercial surrogacy cuts straight to the heart of some of the most contentious discussions in bioethics and law, because the sheer range of stakeholders, coupled with deeply-rooted cultural beliefs…
Paper Doctorate
Book Review: Backlash 9/11 by Bakalian and Bozorgmehr
The purpose of this article is to critique the book "Backlash 9/11: Middle Easterners and Muslim Americans Respond" by Anny Bakalian and Mehdi Bozorgmehr. The discussion begins with a review of the book and a highlight of the major concepts and issues discussed in the book. This is followed by a demonstration of why the book undermines the severity of the backlash and uses an ineffective research methodology.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Pro-poor tourism and its development impacts
Abstract Tourism is an effective tool of achieving development, especially in developing nations, and poor and remote communities. This is possible if governments, non-governmental, and private institutions involved in tourism engage poor and local communities in tourism activities, through pro-poor tourism strategies. Pro-poor tourism strategies, which can alleviate poverty and encourage development include unlocking opportunities in the tourism sector for the poor. This entails the expansion of employment and business activities, provision of training, and addressing the negative environmental and social impact of tourism. The research finds evidence that pro-poor tourism enables sustainable development and the conservation of social-cultural and environmental resources. Overall, pro-poor tourism promotes development at the community level through infrastructure and economic development and promotion of social amenities.
Paper Doctorate
Difficulty of Starting a Gun
This paper focuses on debating gun control within the public sphere. It begins by defining the public sphere and explaining how the public sphere serves as a mediator between the private sphere and public authority. It then goes on to describe how the modern gun control debate, though occurring in the public sphere, has been co-opted by small private-sphere public interest groups, which do not represent the interests of most Americans.
Paper Doctorate
Voltaire and Dostoyevsky Dostoyevsky\'s Notes From Underground
Dostoyevsky's Notes from Underground and Voltaire's Candide are precisely similar works: in attempting to construct a narrative critique of a philosophical system, they slip from harsh satire into a form of…
Paper Doctorate
Man, the State, and War: A Theoretical
Thoughtfully addressing the question as to why mankind enters war, international relations scholar, Dr. Kenneth Neal Waltz, surveys classical and contemporary theories of the behavior of man found in the…
Essay Doctorate
Social Cognitive Theory and Stress Management Social
Social Cognitive Theory and Stress Management
Essay Doctorate
Hero With 1,000 Faces the Classic Hero
The classic hero seems to teach us the value of humanity, while helping us strive for excellence by understanding the value of the experiences rendered through intuition, emotions, and often feelings that are special to the hero – often rather than logical reasoning. The paradigm of heroism transcends genre, chronology and has become so common in the human collective consciousness that it is easily recognized and repeated.
Essay Doctorate
Hawthorne Hooper Suddenly Dons a Mysterious Black
Hawthorne's short story "The Minister's Black Veil" is analyzed in terms of irony, ambiguity, paradox, active evil, determinism, psychological analysis, alienation (isolated character), guilt, pride, Puritan New England, individual vs. society, fate vs. free will, allegory, love vs. hate. The veil symbolizes everything that is wrong with the Great Awakening and puritan christianity.