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Dna
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DNA, or deoxyribonucleic acid, is the molecular blueprint that carries genetic information in living organisms, and it sits at the intersection of biology, forensic science, and technology. Students write about it across a wide range of courses, from introductory biology and biochemistry to criminal justice and forensic science. The topic is academically compelling because it bridges fundamental science — including the structure and replication of DNA first characterized by Watson and Crick — with real-world applications in medicine, law, and laboratory research. Its relevance to pressing social questions, particularly around justice and evidence, keeps it central to undergraduate and graduate curricula alike.

The papers students produce on this topic reflect a genuinely diverse set of approaches. Some focus on forensic applications, examining how DNA evidence and biological samples influence criminal cases, including situations involving misidentification. Others take an experimental or procedural angle, covering laboratory techniques such as PCR, DNA sequencing, and extraction methods. Comparative papers weigh DNA evidence against other forensic tools like fingerprints, while more biological essays explore processes such as genetic material exchange in plant tissue grafts or the structural mechanics of DNA replication and origin recognition.

A strong essay on DNA should open with a clearly scoped thesis — whether the focus is a forensic application, a laboratory process, or a structural concept — rather than attempting to cover the entire field. Evidence drawn from case analysis, peer-reviewed experimental findings, or documented criminal cases tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating DNA as a single unified subject; strong writers identify a specific angle, such as the reliability of DNA evidence in court or the mechanics of a particular replication process, and develop it with precision.

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Paper Doctorate
Forensic Evidence in Criminal Investigations
This is a template and guideline only. Please do not use as a final turn-in paper.
Paper Doctorate
Ethics of Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research Explained
Ethics Surrounding Human Embryonic Stem Cell Research
Paper Undergraduate
Chimerism in Humans: Causes, Cases, and Research
Chimerism comes from the term 'Chimera' which has been widely referenced in botanical regards for plants which have a couple or more tissues with dissimilar genetic arrangements. It results in an offspring which have…
Paper High School
Microorganisms Are Very Tiny Living
Microorganisms are very tiny living beings, about .04 mm in size, so small that they are not as yet visible to the naked eye (Health Hype 2010). They are classified into bacteria, viruses, fungi and protozoa or pathogens.
Research Paper Undergraduate
DNA Analysis on Criminal Cases\'
DNA, "the evidence that does not forget..." As Kirk (cited by Butler, 2005, p. 33) purports, aptly introduces the summary for the following paper. As DNA, present in every nucleated cell, constitutes present and…
Paper Undergraduate
Juvenile Justice System More Focused
¶ … juvenile justice system more focused on procedures and technicalities since the United States Supreme Court case decision in Gault or does the juvenile court system remain primarily an informal process that is…
Paper Doctorate
Pathophysiology of Cervical Cancer Every
Every two minutes, somewhere in the world, a woman dies from cervical cancer (GlaxoSmithKline 2007). Caused by persistent or continuous infection by human papillomavirus (HPV), cervical cancer progresses slowly over a…
Paper Doctorate
Cancer Cell Biology the Fundamental
The fundamental unit of life is the cell and in the body it is the smallest structure exhibiting performance capability of all the processes defining life. Specialized cells are contained in each of the body organs like…
Paper High School
Genetically Modified Food I Chose
I chose to write about genetically modified food because I personally believe that our food and our environment should not be treated as an experiment. The biodiversity and environmental integrity of the world's food…
Essay Doctorate
Atheist in on Being an Atheist, H.J.
This is a response paper to the McCloskey article "On Being an Atheist." It answers the following questions: 1. McCloskey refers to the arguments as "proofs" and often implies that they can't definitively establish the case for God, so therefore they should be abandoned. What would you say about this in light of my comments on the approaches to the arguments in the PointeCast presentation (Lesson 18)? 2. Critique McCloskey's cosmological argumetn; 3. Evolution's impact on religious arguments; 4. McCloskey's objections to the presence of evil; and 5. The idea of atheism as more comforting than religion.