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Diplomacy
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Diplomacy is the practice of managing relationships between states and other political actors through negotiation, communication, and formal agreements rather than direct force. It appears across political science, international relations, history, and government courses, where students are asked to analyze how nations pursue their interests while avoiding or resolving conflict. The topic carries enduring academic interest because it sits at the intersection of power, ethics, and language — requiring analysis of how countries frame terms, build coalitions, and sustain relations over time. Papers drawing on figures like Henry Kissinger or events like the Cold War illustrate how specific doctrines and personalities have shaped American diplomatic tradition, while work on Native nations and European contact pushes the concept into colonial and legal history.

The archived papers approach diplomacy from several distinct angles. Historical analysis is common, covering episodes from early negotiations between Indian nations and European powers through the Cold War and the Korean War, with some work applying strategic frameworks such as Clausewitz's concepts to evaluate military-diplomatic decisions. Comparative approaches examine political and economic change across Latin American countries, while geopolitical and energy competition papers take a policy-oriented lens. Rhetorical analysis also appears, with attention to speeches like Ronald Reagan's address at the Brandenburg Gate as instruments of diplomatic pressure.

A strong essay on diplomacy needs a focused, arguable thesis — claiming that a specific strategy succeeded or failed, or that a particular framework better explains an outcome than alternatives do. Evidence drawn from primary sources, treaty records, speeches, or policy documents carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating diplomacy as a neutral process rather than examining whose interests it serves and whose are marginalized in any given negotiation.

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Paper Doctorate
Effectiveness of the United Nations a Historical Look
United Nations - The UN has been effective Thesis: The UN has succeeded in some of its international responsibilities but has failed in others; and according to the UN Charter the UN may not intervene in matters essentially within the domestic jurisdiction of any state… ONE: The UN has achieved many "remarkable accomplishments" (Encarta.msn.com) • The UN has negotiated 172 peace settlements that ended regional conflicts • The UN has participated in more than 300 international treaties • The UN's "Universal Declaration of Human Rights" (adopted in 1948) has been helpful in raising the consciousness of the need for human rights • Over 3 million children a year have been saved from polio, measles, whooping cough, tuberculosis thanks to immunization programs by the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF)
Paper Doctorate
Interviewed Three People I Chose
¶ … interviewed three people I chose to have different backgrounds. One is my mother that was had hands on experience as she lived through the period of the Cold War and in particular since the late 60s.
Paper Doctorate
Geopolitics According to the 911 Commission Report,
According to the 911 Commission Report, in effect, the U.S. was transformed. The people killed in these attacks included more than 2,600 at World Trade Center, 125 at the Pentagon, and 256 on the four planes which were…
Paper Undergraduate
Formulating a Disaster and Risk Management Plan
Providing security to any community around the globe is the sole purpose of the government. This study has focused on some of the security measures adopted by Lynchburg community in fostering its security. The study also analyses of how disaster is managed within this jurisdiction compared to the critical disaster management measures in the United Kingdom.
Research Paper Doctorate
Why We Should Invade Iraq
Under the terms of the Gulf War cease-fire, Iraq was supposed to destroy all its weapons of mass destruction. It has refused to do so.
Research Paper Doctorate
Gold and Iron: Bismarck, Bleichröder, and German Unification
Columbia historian Fritz Stern gathered thousands of previously unpublished documents, letters, and correspondences between the two foremost shapers of German unification, Otto von Bismarck and Gerson von Bleichrder.
Research Paper Doctorate
Job Application Consulting Technology
As noted on the JP Morgan's own website, the evolution of the credit derivatives market has shifted the entire technology agenda into the banking environment because of the creation of electronic markets.
Paper Undergraduate
Wars of Principles the Falklands and Malvinas
Although the age of imperialism has slowly, but inexorably, been consigned to history books, with the great British, Spanish and Portuguese empires that once dominated the globe now largely defunct after the revolutionary spirit swept through colonies from America to Argentina, vestiges of this age-old system still remain to this day. Despite withdrawing from the vast majority of its former colonies after successful campaigns for independence were waged, the United Kingdom has strived to maintain a semblance of its former power by maintaining control over small areas of land within the nations it previously ruled over. Hong Kong in China, Gibraltar in the Iberian Peninsula, and a half dozen Caribbean islands from Bermuda to Turks and Caicos, the custom of leaving behind British territories in the wake of widespread independence movements was instituted to ensure that the United Kingdom's dogged pursuit of its centuries-old imperialistic ambitions was not undertaken in vain. In the case of British engagement with Argentina, which began, like so many similar conflicts between European nations and the natives of the newly discovered American continent1, with the United Kingdom's claim of sovereignty over the Falkland Islands in 1833, a series of geopolitical maneuvers and cultural upheavals resulted in the outbreak of open warfare in 1982.
Paper Doctorate
Debating NASA's Budget: Worth, Waste, and the Future
As the increasingly impotent federal government lurches towards the edge of a self-imposed fiscal cliff, the public and politicians alike have largely accepted the inevitability of deep cuts to the nation's massively inflated budget. While there is still rancorous debate over exactly how the proverbial belt should be tightened, with conservatives demanding reductions in so-called entitlement programs and liberals countering with decreased military spending, a consensus seems to have emerged regarding the budgetary necessity of the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). Considered by many symbol of bureaucratic waste, with billions of dollars being devoted to implausible missions and esoteric experiments, NASA has been universally targeted as an expendable asset during economic turmoil.
Paper Masters
Inoculation Theory This Is Considered
This is considered a social psychology theory that goes a long way to show how people reinforce their attitude as well as their beliefs so as to be able to maintain them in the long run.