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Foreign Aid
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Foreign aid sits at the intersection of international relations, development economics, and public policy, making it a recurring subject in political science, economics, and government courses. The topic examines how donor nations and international institutions transfer resources—financial, humanitarian, or technical—to recipient countries, and what consequences follow. Its academic appeal lies in a genuine tension: aid is simultaneously a tool of diplomacy, a mechanism for poverty reduction, and a subject of serious empirical dispute about whether it achieves either goal effectively. Debates about the relationship between donors, recipient governments, and developing countries raise questions about sovereignty, dependency, and the conditions under which external resources translate into lasting change.

The papers archived under this topic reflect several distinct approaches. Empirical and evaluative essays test whether foreign aid boosts or hinders economic development, often weighing evidence from specific developing countries against broader theoretical claims. Case-study work narrows the lens to particular contexts, such as foreign aid in Haiti, to examine how resources are delivered and absorbed in practice. Comparative and critical essays, including those engaging with readings by scholars such as Kanbur, assess what conditions make development aid effective and where policy design falls short. Some papers extend into U.S. foreign policy and strategic partnerships, treating aid as one instrument within a wider diplomatic framework.

A strong essay on foreign aid requires a clearly scoped thesis—arguing not just that aid "matters" but specifying under what conditions, for which outcomes, and for whom. Evidence drawn from country-level economic data, policy evaluations, and documented donor-recipient relationships carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating aid as a monolithic category; distinguishing between humanitarian relief, budget support, and conditional loans is essential to making a precise and defensible argument.

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Paper Doctorate
Public Needs to Know Is it Possible
Abstract Is it possible to balance the public need to know and the need for secrecy on issues relating to national security? This is a question that has been floated in quite a number of forums. While there are those who push for absolute or partial secrecy when it comes to issues touching on national security, others are convinced that the public need to know should be upheld by backing a free press. I support the latter view.
Thesis Undergraduate
Hurricane Andrew: impacts and recovery
The paper creates the understanding of Hurricane Andrew by providing a definition and origin. The paper identifies areas affected by Hurricane Andrew (Florida, Louisiana, Bahamas, and the Gulf of Mexico) outlining the extent of damage caused by the Hurricane. It outlines the key players supporting the recovery of affected areas.
Research Paper Doctorate
American foreign policy: history and frameworks
Summary of chapter on "Alternative Futures:
Research Paper Doctorate
Humanitarian Intervention and NATO's Role Against Terrorism
One of the most purposeful and successful undertakings that has benefited third world nations is humanitarian intervention. It is an act arising out of the human collective spirit as people come together through…
Essay Undergraduate
Strategic Context of Sub-Saharan Africa
The paper is divided into 2 sections. The first section starts by discussing Africa's regional significance. Subsequently, it highlights Africa's (1) social, (2) economic and (3) political significance in three separate sections. Lastly, Africa's global significance is revealed. In the second section, vital American interests are defined in light of Africa's significance (outlined in the first section). Subsequently, a brief review of past policies is carried out then policy recommendations are given in 2 separate sections.
Research Paper Doctorate
Landes\' Conclusions in the Wealth and Poverty
In The Wealth and Poverty of Nations: Why Some Are So Rich and Some So Poor, David S. Landes analyzes the distribution of wealth in his study of world economics. Landes writes that the key to the current inequality…
Research Paper Doctorate
Japan and Korea\'s Political Economy Background
In the period after the World War II, a large part of the world was restructured, especially the Pacific Asia (Borthwick, 1992). One of the most dramatic changes that took place in Asia was that several countries that…
Paper Undergraduate
Foreign Aid vs. Economic Growth: A Critical
In this paper, explore the concept of foreign aid and economic development in an African. We focus on a critical evaluation of the success as well as failure of foreign aid in Africa (Ethiopia).
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 Doctorate
Tajikistan to the North of Tajikistan Lies
This paper is about the History and Overview of Tajikistan, from its early days as part of the Achaemenid Persian Empire to being ruled by the Greeks, Arabs, Samanids, Mongols and finally the Russians/Soviets until they won their independence 1991. This paper is about the History and Overview of Tajikistan, from its early days as part of the Achaemenid Persian Empire to being ruled by the Greeks, Arabs, Samanids, Mongols and finally the Russians/Soviets until they won their independence 1991.