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Illegal Aliens
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Illegal aliens — more formally called undocumented or unauthorized immigrants — is a topic that appears frequently in political science, public policy, criminal justice, and sociology courses. It sits at the intersection of law, economics, and social welfare, making it genuinely complex for academic analysis. The subject raises questions about national sovereignty, civil rights, labor markets, and the capacity of public institutions, all of which give instructors across government and policy disciplines strong reasons to assign it. The involvement of agencies like Homeland Security, ongoing debates over legislation such as the DREAM Act, and cross-border dynamics with Mexico provide concrete policy frameworks that anchor the discussion in real institutional and legal structures.

Papers on this topic approach it from several distinct angles. Many take a policy and cost-analysis perspective, examining how undocumented immigration affects public systems — particularly healthcare, as seen in analyses focused on California and national trends. Others adopt a criminal justice lens, exploring how the justice process handles immigrants who commit crimes, or investigating specific organizations like Mara Salvatrucha MS-13 and the broader patterns of gang violence. Economic arguments appear in papers on labor practices, such as the hiring of undocumented workers by major corporations. Some essays take a demographic or regional focus, concentrating on Hispanic immigrant communities in cities like Los Angeles.

A strong essay on this topic requires a clearly scoped thesis that commits to one dimension — economic, legal, public health, or criminal justice — rather than trying to cover all of them at once. Evidence drawn from government reports, court records, or documented policy outcomes tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is relying on politically charged language without defining key terms precisely, which undermines analytical credibility and weakens the argument.

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Hiring of illegal aliens at Walmart
Wal-Mart has earned phenomenal success and accolades over the last 3 decades. They have grown from a local retailer to a global powerhouse. Yet, the sky is not always blue in the land of discount pricing.
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Chicano issues and contemporary perspectives
American society has suffered with the over emphasis on White values and beliefs since its inception. This overemphasis advanced to the point of suffering through a Civil War, a prolonged battle for civil rights, and…
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Hofstede's Cultural Dimensions: UAE, Mexico, and Spain
"Culture is more often a source of conflict than of synergy. Cultural differences are a nuisance at best and often a disaster." - Dr. Geert Hofstede
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Bilingual education concepts and outcomes
Predicting the effect of bilingual education on student outcomes with the work done by Huddy and Sears, "Opposition to Bilingual Education: Prejudice or the Defense of Realistic Interests?" is problematical.
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Illegal immigration: causes, effects, and policy implications
Both the United States government and individual state governments as well are concerned about the high rate of illegal immigration into our country. There are several reasons for this.
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Dream Act -- Immigration Controversy the \"Dream
Introduction The "Dream Act" is legislation that was originally introduced to the U.S. Congress in 2001 and in 2009 it was re-introduced after being co-authored by Republican U.S. Senator Orin Hatch of Utah and Democrat U.S. Senator Dick Durbin of Illinois. The "Dream" Act in Dream Act is an acronym for "The Development, Relief and Education of Alien Minors Act." The Act is designed to allow young Latinos – who are technically illegal immigrants – to avoid deportation and become American citizens through a specific legal process. These young people were brought into the U.S. by their undocumented immigrant parents as children, but because they have never achieved citizenship, they fear the worst – deportation. Hence, the Dream Act would allow Latinos who at present are illegal – and who were under the age of 15 when their parents brought them into the United States and are under the age of 30 now – to remain legally in the U.S. for up to six years if certain requirements are realized.
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Macroeconomics concepts and applications
Sixty Percent of the youth between eighteen and thirty in Detroit are unemployed, have not completed high school, are at various levels of functional illiteracy, without job skills, and are living on welfare or through…
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Immigration Reform. Pros and Cons
Briefly state two facts presented by each side.
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Mexico U.S. Drug Trade Border the Challenges
The challenges of an extremely volatile economy are significant in any culture or population but one of the starkest situations today is the extreme variation between the economies of Mexico and the United States, which shares a 3,000 mile long border. The variations of the economies are so extreme and poverty is such a challenge in Mexico that hundreds of thousands and possibly millions of people cross over from Mexico to the US, both legitimately and illegally to attempt to obtain income that is not available in Mexico, via legitimate employment. One of the most significant problems with this disparity is the fact the population of Mexico can and often does fall prey to one of the only ways to earn significant income, drug smuggling. The US has an almost boundless demand for narcotics and Mexico's poverty and limited and strained infrastructure has an almost boundless ability to supply these narcotics. (Jenner 903-904) According to one US border patrol officer, Renee Felix, in Nogales the problem began to be really bad for this small town, now considered the epicenter of the drug trafficking into the US from Mexico and trafficking of weapons and cash back from the US, began in the 1970s (National Geographic, 2010-2011, S01E05).
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Women and Children Are Facing Abuse All
Women and children are facing abuse all over the world, astonishingly, in countries where rights against abuse are more pronounced than in any other country. We are going to take the case of the abuse of immigrant women…