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Immigrants
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Immigration sits at the intersection of political science, public policy, sociology, and cultural studies, making it a frequent subject in government and social science courses. Students write about it because it raises fundamental questions about citizenship, economic belonging, national identity, and social integration. The topic spans legal and policy debates — such as arguments around legalization programs for undocumented workers — as well as lived cultural experiences, including language acquisition, family support services, and the spiritual and community lives immigrants build in new countries. Works like Junot Diaz's Drown and Abraham Cahan's Yekl also bring immigration into literary analysis, showing how the experience of displacement and assimilation translates across disciplines.

Archived papers on this topic take a wide range of approaches. Some are policy-focused, weighing the economic impact of legal and illegal immigrants on the United States or evaluating whether legalization programs serve national interests. Others are comparative, examining how immigrants influence economies in countries like Taiwan alongside the United States. Cultural and ethnographic angles appear frequently too, with papers exploring Latino spirituality, English language acquisition, bilingualism, and the challenges facing Korean American communities. Narrative and literary analysis essays examine immigrant identity through fiction and memoir, tracing themes of class and struggle across specific texts.

A strong essay on immigration scopes its thesis around a specific population, policy question, or cultural dynamic rather than treating immigrants as a single undifferentiated group. Evidence drawn from economic data, policy analysis, or close reading of primary sources carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is overgeneralizing — assuming one community's experience represents all immigrants, which undermines both analytical precision and the credibility of any argument.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
14th and 17th Amendment
The argument between state and federal authority is a commonplace one in the history of constitutional debate. However, this discussion shows, this debate has often been used as a way to mask ulterior motives. Just as slave states used state rights as an argument to protect slavery, so too has the Tea Party, in its push to repeal the 14th and 17th Amendments, used states rights to overshadow inherently racialist ambitions.
Paper Undergraduate
Iron Curtain: This Term Refers
Iron Curtain: This term refers to an imaginary "curtain" that fell across Eastern Europe after World War II and which eventually led to the construction of the Berlin Wall, separating East from West Germany.
Paper Undergraduate
Social equity leadership conference
Social equity is a key issue of public administration and forms the basic theme of the 2013 "Social Equity Leadership Conference," in June. This white paper discusses the key goals of the conference based on the conference issue for social equity as global engagement and local responsibility. These are the issue facing social equity among domestic and global public leaders in public and private agencies in the education, immigration, transportation, environmental, policing and corrections sectors. A review of theories on public administration identifies that public leadership networking, collaboration, and cooperation with leaders and agencies is necessary. This is associated with public leadership practices like public policy development, implementation, monitoring, and evaluation, social equity, and public advocacy.
Paper Undergraduate
Immigration: Why the United States
Abstract The debate on whether or not the U.S. should encourage immigration has been ongoing for quite a long period of time. Currently, in comparison to all the other destinations in the world, the U.S. admits the highest number of immigrants. This text concerns itself with the demerits of immigration. In so doing, the arguments that have been presented in favor of immigration will also be taken into consideration.
Essay Doctorate
Living on a Lifeboat by Garrett Hardin
Word Count (excluding titles and footnotes: 1860)
Paper Doctorate
Family\'s Emigration From the Ukraine
¶ … family's emigration from the Ukraine following the breakup of the Soviet Union is examined. In doing so, the positive and negative features of my life before and after the emigration will be reviewed and a…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Bilingual education: models, outcomes, and implementation strategies
The Sociology of Bilingual Education -- an integrative solution
Research Paper Doctorate
History of Canadian labour: gains and changes from 1940 to 1975
The objective of this work is to analyze the extent to which workers made gains, and the ways in which the working class and labor movement changed between 1940 and 1975. This work will discuss the origins of the…
Research Paper Doctorate
Hepatitis B overview and clinical management
This is brief review of a case study for a 39-year-old Asian-American man originally from China who was discovered to be a chronic carrier of the hepatitis B virus (HBV). Over the course of the past 2 years he received…
Research Paper Doctorate
Chicano -- Mexican Civil Rights
Chicano! The History of the Mexican-American Civil Rights Movement