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Greenhouse Gases
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Greenhouse gases are compounds in Earth's atmosphere — including carbon dioxide, methane, and water vapor — that trap heat and regulate surface temperatures. Students write about this topic across a wide range of disciplines, from earth science and environmental studies to political economy and policy analysis. What makes greenhouse gases academically compelling is their position at the intersection of atmospheric chemistry, ecosystem health, and human decision-making. The topic demands that writers understand both the physical mechanisms driving temperature increase and warming, and the social systems that produce or respond to those changes.

The student papers archived on this topic approach greenhouse gases from several distinct angles. Some focus on cause-and-effect relationships, examining how deforestation or air transport emissions contribute to atmospheric change. Others take a policy or political economy lens, analyzing how climate change connects to sustainability frameworks, integrated air quality regulations, or green business models. Still others ground the topic in specific environmental contexts, such as watershed ecosystems or the role of alternative fuels, moving between local case studies and global warming trends. This range reflects how broadly the subject spreads across scientific and social science coursework.

A strong essay on greenhouse gases needs a clearly scoped thesis — arguing, for instance, that a specific sector drives disproportionate emissions, or that a particular policy framework inadequately addresses atmospheric warming. Evidence drawn from measurable climate data, ecosystem impacts, or documented policy outcomes tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating "climate change" as the thesis itself rather than as context; the argument should stake a specific, debatable claim about causes, consequences, or solutions.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Debate negative argument strategies and effectiveness
Government should NOT turn away from fossil fuels
Paper Doctorate
Global Warming Appear Almost Daily
¶ … global warming appear almost daily in news sources and academic journals. The Internet is also replete with sources on the topic of global warming. Because global warming affects the Arctic at a far faster and more…
Paper Undergraduate
Hot, Well, Everywhere: The Reality
This paper examines global warming and refutes those skeptics who claim that the climate is not changing. It begins by establishing that the climate is changing, showing evidence of an increasing global temperature that is increasing at rates not seen in the global record. Next, it demonstrates a link between human activity and global warming. Third, it focuses on the negative consequences of climate change for humans.
Essay Doctorate
Information organization and document synthesis in academic submissions
Climate change, also known in some circles as global warming, is a phenomenon that has been the subject of a vast amount of attention in recent decades. This issue stands the potential not only to threaten many animal species around the world, but also has the potential to virtually eliminate the human race by making the climate of the earth inhospitable. Although it may be somewhat unlikely that the human species will become extinct anytime in the near future, the limitations of the planet to support the exponentially growing human population are becoming increasingly more salient as this field of research continues developing. With the world population recently climbing to over seven billion people, many researchers are questioning the natural ecosystem's ability to support the global population (Hanna and Osborne-Lee). Theoretically, humans will reach a point in which the regenerative capacity of the planet will no longer support the physical requirements of the population; if that point has not been crossed already.
Paper Undergraduate
Geology concepts and applications
This study answers 20 questions and discusses which of the interrelationships between the environmental spheres, in your experience, has had the biggest effect on human society, or vice versa. Examples are provided. A specifically important aspect of the atmosphere is that the atmosphere serves a vital protective function in that it absorbs highly energetic ultraviolet radiation from the sun that would kill living organisms exposed to it. The atmosphere stabilizes the temperature of the earth and is the medium in which water evaporated from oceans as the first step in the hydrologic cycle is transported over land masses to fall as rain over land." (Manahan, 2005)
Paper Doctorate
Are Electric Cars a Good Solution to U.S. Oil Consumption?
America is the most obese nation and it is in serious need of weight control awareness and intervention programs. The healthy eating, activity and lifestyle patterns will help maintain a healthy and most productive weight. The people will also be safe from many diseases and health disorders. Nurses can play a vital role in reducing rates of obesity among citizens of Lansdowne.America is the most obese nation and it is in serious need of weight control awareness and intervention programs. The healthy eating, activity and lifestyle patterns will help maintain a healthy and most productive weight. The people will also be safe from many diseases and health disorders. Nurses can play a vital role in reducing rates of obesity among citizens of Lansdowne.
Research Paper Doctorate
Ethanol market dynamics and trends
Ethanol is a substance often used in the renewable energy industry, and specifically in fuels. As such, ethanol is seen as part of the answer to the energy crisis the world currently faces.
Paper Doctorate
Globalization Greenhouse Gas Emissions What
What do you think is the best principle of fairness for the distribution of the burden of reducing greenhouse gas emissions?
Paper Doctorate
European Union\'s Emissions Trading System ETS
The objective of this study is to research the European Union's Emissions Trading System (EU ETS) and to answer the questions of what is the stated purpose behind the EU ETS and why the concept of the EU ETS is agreed or disagreed with. The question of what the current and potential results of the EU ETS will be examined and other effects of the EU ETS. This work will examines whether the United States should participate in the EU ETS and what are two other options for achieving the stated purpose behind the EU ETS?
Research Paper Doctorate
China's Market Socialism: Economic Growth and Its Trade-Offs
China has been in the last decades one of the best examples of constant economic development and growth and the example everyone likes to give when it comes to extraordinary GDP growth rates.