Essay Topic Hub

Fourteenth Amendment
Essays

351+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

351 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED
Browse academic paper examples on Fourteenth Amendment — model essays, research papers, and study materials from the PaperDue archive.
Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
Punishment then and now: equity and the Eighth Amendment
The Eighth Amendment of the United States Constitution, which is included in the U.S. Bill of Rights, forbids excessive bail or fines, as well as cruel and unusual punishment. The expressions used were taken from the…
Essay Doctorate
Constitutional Rights of Prisoners the Hands Off
The hands off doctrine that existed throughout the United States through the 1960s was the notion that the law did not apply to prisoners. It Convicted offenders, who were incarcerated, were not eligible for the same…
Paper Doctorate
1946, Heman Sweatt, an Intelligent
¶ … 1946, Heman Sweatt, an intelligent and well qualified African-American man, at the behest of the National Association of Colored Peoples (NAACP), applied for admission to the University of Texas School of Law.
Paper Undergraduate
Clarence Thomas: Personhood and Politics
For those old enough to remember the extreme controversy surrounding his nomination process in the early 1990s, Clarence Thomas is undoubtedly one of the most well-known Justices currently sitting on the Supreme Court,…
Paper Undergraduate
Basic due process protections for students
¶ … Due Process for Students in Public Schools
Paper Undergraduate
Exactions and Taking Under United
Funding of Public Projects through Exactions and Takings
Paper Doctorate
Criminal justice and capital punishment
This paper will briefly examine a few of the arguments for and against the application of the death penalty. It examines the history of capital punishment, the current global perspective on the subject, the inequities of the application of the death penalty, and the continuum of moral justification for taking a human life. Proponents of the death penalty argue five purposes for its use, to remove from society someone who would cause more harm, someone who is incapable of rehabilitation, to deter others from committing murder, to punish the criminal, and to take retribution on behalf of the victim. Opponents of the death penalty argue that death constitutes "cruel and unusual punishment", that the various means used by the state kill a criminal are cruel, that the death penalty is invoked disproportionally against the poor, as well as against racial, ethnic and religious minorities, that the death penalty is applied arbitrarily and inconsistently, and wrongly convicted, innocent people have received death sentences and be executed, that a rehabilitated criminal can make a morally valuable contribution to society and that killing human life under any circumstances is morally wrong.
Paper Undergraduate
Bilingual education: approaches, benefits, and implementation strategies
The number of English language learning (ELL) students in the United States has increased dramatically over the last decade. According to a 1991 national study, there are over 2,300,000 students in grades K.
Essay Doctorate
Constitutional rights violations in high school education: an IRAC analysis
¶ … violation of the student's Constitutional rights
Essay Doctorate
First Amendment, the Constitution, and the Supreme
¶ … First Amendment, the Constitution, and the Supreme Court