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Imperialism
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Imperialism refers to the practice by which powerful nations extend political, economic, and cultural dominance over weaker territories and peoples. It appears frequently in political science, history, and international relations courses because it shaped the modern world order in fundamental ways. Students are drawn to the topic because it sits at the intersection of power, ideology, and human consequence, raising questions about how Europe and other dominant nations built empires across Africa, Asia, the Americas, and beyond. Its connections to colonialism, racial hierarchy, industrialization, and both World Wars make it academically rich and persistently relevant to understanding contemporary global politics.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Many take a historical and regional lens, examining imperialism in Africa during the nineteenth century, its aftermath in Asia following World War II, or its dynamics in the Caribbean Basin through foreign policy analysis. Others are comparative, tracing connections between industrial capitalism and imperial expansion, or linking imperialism to racial othering as a broader ideological system. Some papers engage in literary criticism, using Joseph Conrad's Heart of Darkness to examine how imperial ideology was represented and challenged in literature. Still others adopt a broad survey approach, covering the Protestant Reformation, New Imperialism, and the lead-up to global conflict.

A strong essay on imperialism requires a focused thesis that moves beyond simply cataloguing events toward explaining causes, mechanisms, or consequences. Evidence drawn from specific regions, time periods, or policy decisions carries more weight than sweeping generalizations. Writers should be careful to avoid treating imperialism as a single uniform phenomenon — its expression differed significantly across Europe, Africa, Asia, and the Americas — and a well-scoped essay will acknowledge that complexity without losing argumentative clarity.

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Essay Doctorate
U.S. in the Interwar Years: A Nation
This paper examines the interwar years between World War 1 and World War 2 and discusses the role of the US during that period. It shows how the US was largely to blame for the rise of imperialism and how its empty rhetoric of peace and disarmament masked an ulterior motive of aggression and dominance in foreign affairs.
Paper Doctorate
Community, 9/11, and the Imagined Nation After Tragedy
In general, the idea of community conveys two rather distinct messages. It is often used to refer to a social unit of varying size that shares common values, or a national or international community in which the individuals have something unique or a set of principles and beliefs that are common to most of the group. Events such as 9/11, however, change the way community is "imagined." This essay focuses on a painting/photograph and a poem to prove that imagined communities transcend time and demographics to form freedom in adversity.
Research Paper Doctorate
Evidence and Analysis: The National Guardsmen Violated
¶ … evidence and analysis: "The national guardsmen violated the Students right of assembly at Kent State University on May 4, 1970." The paper will describe the evidences and circumstances of May 4, 1970 in details, the…
Research Paper Doctorate
A thematic comparison of literature and culture
Thematic Comparison: Divine Intervention in Homer & Virgil
Research Paper Doctorate
U.S. War Against Iraq \'The Big Lie\':
'The Big Lie': Larry Mosqueda's Historical Analysis of U.S. Imperialism and Its Significance with the U.S.-Iraq War (Gulf War II)
Research Paper Doctorate
Global Free Trade Are so Obvious, Why
¶ … global free trade are so obvious, why are nations sometimes so reluctant to embrace measures that might enhance it?)
Research Paper Doctorate
Multiculturalists Now by Nathan Glazer, and Includes
¶ … Multiculturalists Now by Nathan Glazer, and includes chapter summaries, and a discussion concerning multiculturalism within the U.S. school system, and what can be done to improve multiculturalism within the school…
Research Paper Doctorate
Totalitarianism Hannah Arendt, in Her Book, Origins
Hannah Arendt, in her book, "Origins of Totalitarianism," attributes the formation of a mass society in Europe in the first decades of the 20th century to "grassroots eruptions" from a number of collective groups.
Essay Doctorate
Legal Ethics and Religious Morality
Confidentiality and Law: Expectations of Trust in Legal Ethics
Research Paper Masters
Great Artists of the Late 20th and Early 21st Century
¶ … women artists," feminists have reflexively responded by trying to find great women artists from the past who were undiscovered or to emphasize little-regarded female artists from past artistic movements dominated by…