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Island
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Islands occupy a unique position in environmental and social studies because they function as bounded, observable systems where questions of ecology, culture, development, and identity play out in concentrated form. Courses in environmental science, urban sociology, cultural studies, and geography regularly use island settings as case studies precisely because their physical limits make complex dynamics easier to trace. Works like Russell Shorto's The Island at the Center of the World and The Value of Hawaii appear as touchstones in student writing, reflecting how islands generate rich intersections between historical narrative and present-day consequence. The reggae and Rastafari traditions rooted in Jamaica similarly illustrate how island geography shapes cultural identity in academically compelling ways.

Student essays on this topic approach islands from strikingly varied angles. Some take a literary or critical lens, analyzing fiction such as Christopher Moore's Island of the Sequined Love Nun or examining regional identity through Carey McWilliams's concept of Southern California as an island on the land. Others adopt policy and development frameworks, as seen in papers addressing higher education improvement and applied business case studies set in island contexts. The "Decisions in Paradise" series represents a scenario-based approach, asking writers to work through ethical and strategic choices under real constraints of island life, including lack of infrastructure and fragile natural systems.

A strong essay on this topic anchors its thesis in the specific tension an island setting creates — between isolation and connection, development and conservation, or local identity and outside influence. Evidence drawn from concrete case studies, historical records, or close textual analysis carries more weight than broad generalizations about island life. The most common pitfall is treating "island" as mere backdrop rather than as an active factor that shapes every dimension of the argument being made.

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Paper Doctorate
Thomas More's Utopia as criticism of sixteenth century England
This essay examines Thomas More's Utopia, and particularly the way it demonstrates the problems inherent in society as such. By focusing on Utopia's inclusion of slaves, religion, and state-sanctioned murdered for political dissidents, one can see how Utopia is, in actuality, anything but. Ultimately, More seems more interested in discussing the problems of society than in providing solutions.
Paper Doctorate
Battle of Midway, a Naval Battle Fought
¶ … Battle of Midway, a naval battle fought near the Central Pacific island of Midway, was the most important victory for the United States in World War 2. Before this battle Japanese forces were on the offensive,…
Research Paper Doctorate
Latin or Caribbean Music
¶ … steel drum, or steel pan, is a unique instrument commonly heard in Caribbean music today, and is one of the most recently "invented" instruments in the world, when taken in its current form.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Homer's Odyssey
The Odyssey or the myth of the universal journey.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Ancient Greece: history, culture, and society
Until about 1870, historians and scholars who specialized in the history and archeology of ancient Greece were, for the most part, quite ignorant about Greek culture and society and considered this area of study as…
Paper Undergraduate
Linguistic Field Trip in Robeson
In Robeson County, North Carolina, a situation that is of interest to many linguists exists. An ethnically diverse community made up of primarily African-Americans, Native Americans, and Anglo-Americans, the community…
Paper Undergraduate
Reformation doctrinal controversy and theological disputes
¶ … theological questions in Christianity is the nature of God and whether He is a single being or entity -- the unified God of the Unitarians, in other words -- or an entity that is three-in-one, the trinity of the…
Paper Masters
Community Service at a Nursing Home and Gandhi's Call to Action
¶ … warms the heart more than a wide smile, especially when your actions are bringing it to another person's lips. That is how I felt every day when visiting my "grandparents," who once had Hansen's disease, better…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Douglas Macarthur and the Inchon
Most historians today would agree that Douglas MacArthur (1880-1964) has not "faded away," but remains a source of ongoing research and scholarly investigation concerning his career and the decisions that ultimately…
Paper Undergraduate
Daniel Defoe\'s Robinson Crusoe and Jane Austen\'s
This comparative essay addresses the similar function of land in Robinson Crusoe and Mansfield Park. Though seemingly different novels in terms of plot, they both use land as a metaphorical representation of patriarchal, religious, and economic authority. Comparing the two novels reveals how this use of land perpetuates a destructive moral system.