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Editorial
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An editorial is a form of opinion-driven writing in which an author advances a clear argument, typically on a matter of public, social, or cultural concern. Students across English composition, journalism, media studies, and communications courses engage with editorials both as writers and as critical analysts. What makes the form academically interesting is its demand for deliberate rhetorical construction: a strong editorial must balance persuasive appeal with credible evidence, making it a practical testing ground for argumentation theory and rhetorical analysis alike.

The papers archived here approach editorials from several distinct angles. Some focus on argument structure and the identification of logical weaknesses, as seen in work examining editorial fallacies and the mechanics of claims. Others take a media and cultural perspective, analyzing how editorial voices operate within dominant media economies or appear in venues such as high-end women's magazines. Additional papers move into applied domains, using an editorial framework to propose solutions to policy questions like illegal immigration or to evaluate issues in fields such as nursing practice and consumer behavior. Historical and literary subjects also appear, with authors and cultural figures treated through an argumentative editorial lens.

A strong essay on this topic requires a focused, contestable thesis rather than a broad summary of an issue. Evidence that carries the most weight is specific — direct quotations, documented examples, or traceable claims that can be evaluated for credibility and relevance. One common pitfall is conflating personal opinion with reasoned argument; effective editorial writing and analysis both depend on showing how a message is constructed and supported, not simply asserting that a position is correct.

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Paper Undergraduate
Japanese WWII Both the Chicago
Both the Chicago Daily Tribune and the Los Angeles Times presented the anti-Japanese sentiments during World War Two as being a matter of constitutional protection for citizens of the United States.
Research Paper Doctorate
John Grierson the Documentary Film
The documentary film developed alongside the narrative film, though largely during the sound era. It was shaped most profoundly during the 1930s as filmmakers began to record sociological an anthropological studies of…
Essay Doctorate
Information security in healthcare systems
The recent advances in technology -- databases that store personal medical records and information -- are bringing tools to patients, doctors and other healthcare professionals that were simply not available just a few…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Carl Schramm's Entrepreneurial Imperative Explained
According to Carl Schramm's philosophy of entrepreneurialism and his belief in the value of the capitalist initiative, democracy is not necessary for capitalism to take root, but capitalism can lead to democracy, as a…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Big box living wage ordinance
Big Box Ordinances number of cities have been considering a living wage ordinance that would mandate a minimum pay level for all employees, assuring the lowest paid employees that they would receive a wage considered…
Paper Undergraduate
Weimar Republic the Weimer Republic,
The Weimer republic, of post-WWI Germany was in many ways doomed to social and political failure, most profoundly because of the economic climate of the period which it encompassed.
Paper Undergraduate
Attributes of the ideal in higher education
The proper aim of education is to promote significant learning.
Paper Doctorate
Victim\'s Right Act of 2004
This essay explains that the Crime Victims' Rights Act, part of the Justice for All Act of 2004, enumerates the rights afforded to victims in federal criminal cases. However, this paper also discusses the Routine Activity Theory basically mentions that in order for a crime to be done, three exact standards will have to be involved in the first place. Routine activity theory principle is that crime is comparatively unaffected by social causes for instance inequality poverty, and unemployment.
Paper Undergraduate
Public Relations\' Role in Launching
Public Relations' Role in Launching Hybrid Automobiles at Toyota Motor Company
Paper Undergraduate
Discrimination and Affirmative Action
"Firefighting is a skilled job where all of the skills learned are on the job… It's a really good job, and it's been racially exclusive in most of our major cities…" (John Payton, NAACP) (Liptak, 2009, The New York…