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Global Governance
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Global governance refers to the frameworks, institutions, and norms through which international actors coordinate responses to problems that cross national borders. It appears across political science, international relations, and public administration courses because it raises fundamental questions about how order, cooperation, and accountability can function without a single world government. Students are drawn to it precisely because the concept sits at the intersection of competing interests — national sovereignty, international law, and the roles of intergovernmental organizations — making it intellectually rich and practically urgent in an era defined by shared threats.

Papers on this topic approach global governance from several directions. Some examine the structural foundations of the system itself, including the United Nations and regional organizations, while others analyze specific bodies of law such as the Vienna Convention on diplomatic relations or the enforcement problems inherent in international law. Human rights questions — including cultural relativism and documented violations in conflict zones like the Middle East — appear frequently, as do studies of terrorism, war, and their effects on public administration. Other papers zoom in on non-state actors, exploring how cities, corporations, labor unions, and IGOs participate in world politics alongside traditional state governments.

A strong essay on global governance benefits from a clearly scoped thesis that specifies which institution, legal framework, or transnational problem is under examination rather than treating the concept in the abstract. Evidence drawn from treaty texts, case studies of specific organizations, or documented policy outcomes tends to carry more analytical weight than broad generalizations. The most common pitfall is conflating description with argument — explaining what global governance is without making a defensible claim about how well or poorly it functions in a given context.

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Paper Masters
The war in Afghanistan
Abstract Following the unprecedented 9/ 11 terrorist attacks on American soil, an atmosphere of fear and hysteria swept through the world. US reprisal came in the form of fully blown war against terrorism as they assured the world that America would use all resources at its disposal to wage war on terror. Even as the demise of Osama bin Laden marked an important milestone in the US-led war on terror, it appears as though U.S. Middle East foreign policy is going to take yet another tactical turn. After scaling down operations in Iraq in the first term, the Obama administration is at least rhetorically signaling that they will remove combat troops in 2014. By just about every measure, Afghanistan is still smoldering causing speculation that it could possibly reignite. Will the US finally withdraw the combat troops by 2014? Experts believe that withdraw is not in America's best interests. Proponents of the conflict theories, realism, world systems theory and a section of Marxist scholars lay foundation for an integrated approach to this issue. Is there a room for compassion in international relations? Enduring tensions and persistent warfare seems to indicate the exact opposite. The war on terror has caused historic misunderstanding, which has paralyzed relations between Middle East and the West. They have entered a war from which they might never get out in this lifetime.
Research Paper Doctorate
Non-Traditional Security Threats and the EU
Weapons of Mass Destruction and Nuclear Threat
Paper Undergraduate
Public Sphere Democratic Governance Relates
Democratic governance relates to the capacity and opportunity available at the disposal of the citizens for the purposes of engagement in enlightened debate or discussion. Public sphere refers to the opportunity in which citizens of the states discuss and debate on critical aspects of the nation. Habermas's concept of the public sphere focuses on the explanation of the realm within social life which facilitating the formation and accessibility of the public opinion to all citizens. According to his analysis, the engagement within the public sphere is blind to class positions. Interactions or connections between activists within the context of the public sphere relate to the general interest of the state. The main purpose of this research is to evaluate the existence of the new aspects of public spheres with the aim of evaluating the implications towards empowerment of the citizens, enhancement of democracy, and other components such as re-feudalism.
Research Paper Doctorate
Charity foundations: roles, structures, and impact
Recent Article in BRW concerning Charity Accountability
Research Paper Doctorate
Sustainable Development - A Global Challenge Need
Sustainable Development - a Global Challenge
Essay Doctorate
Multicultural Marketing to a Multicultural Audience --
This research paper is the final, cumulative effort of a semester-long project studying the effects of marketing to a multicultural audience. The need for multicultural marketing is assessed on a domestic and on an international level. McDonald's and Starbucks are used as examples of successful multicultural marketing and the paper concludes with speculation about how multicultural marketing will evolve in the future.
Paper Doctorate
Essay questions on assigned topics
Communism is a society without money (For Communism) 1, without a state, without property and without social classes. People come together to carry out a project or to respond to some need of the human community but…
Research Paper Doctorate
Effect of the Eurozone Today on the Global Financial Markets
Global markets are so intertwined today that what affects one is definitely going to have an impact on another. Case in point, the recent issues in Greece and other European Union (EU) countries have had a global effect…
Thesis Undergraduate
Beginning or End of Unions
Unions are various organizations are formed by and for workers to practice collective wages, objectives, rules and benefits in a workplace environment. Unions started to grow mainly after the civil war as one of the…
Paper Doctorate
Globalization\'s Affect on Public Health the Objective
The objective of this study is to examine the affect of globalization on public health. Mendoza (2007) writes that the World Health Assembly (WHA) "ratified the new International Health Regulations" in May 2005. (p.79) The revised IHR is reported to empower the World Health Organization (WHO) and member states to meet the 21st Century global health challenges affecting international traffic and trade." (Mendoza, 2007, p.79) The IHR is described as a "key global governance instrument for the protection of international spread of disease, and in order to obtain its intended goals it must be administrated under ethical governance principles promoting the cooperation among member states, WHO, intergovernmental organizations, international bodies, corporations and non-government organizations." (Mendoza, 2007, p.79) Mendoza reports that the broader scope of the IHR is such that "introduces obligations at local, national and international levels, which in turn call for an analysis of the new Regulations." (Mendoza, p.79) The IHR is reported to empower member states and the WHO through clearing the collaborative channels with intergovernmental organizations and international bodies. (Mendoza, , paraphrased) The IHR provides a global platform uniquely suited for the "creation of interdisciplinary collaborative mechanisms that will facilitate the flow of information, technical and operational, between the multiple relevant actors of the new IHR system." (Mendoza, p. 79)