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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 High School
Global deforestation in Madagascar: challenges and impacts
The indisputable fact that tropical rainforests are vital to the planet's process of ensuring habitability for humanity has not stopped society, in both core countries and periphery countries, from wantonly destroying them on a scale that has been significantly accelerated by industrialized processes. According to the World-Systems Theory first advocated by Wallerstein in his seminal treatise World-Systems Analysis: An Introduction, this phenomenon of counterproductive action during the procurement of immediate gain is an unfortunate byproduct of the overriding prerogative of core countries to exploit periphery countries through the symbiotic core-periphery relationship (17). The current construction of World-Systems analysis holds that core countries, including America, Europe's thriving economies, and developed nations in Africa and Asia, derive enormous economic and political power from "the axial division of labor of a capitalist world-economy (that) divides production into core-like products and peripheral products" (Wallerstein 28). Madagascar's relative abundance of untapped natural resources, in the form of massive "old-growth" tropical rainforests, and deposits of minerals like chromite and titanium ore which are now used in the construction of cellular telephones and laptop computing devices, represent peripheral products that can be exploited for the ongoing manufacture and distribution of the core products driving the engine of globalized commerce.
Essay Doctorate
Forsaken Island Christopher Sholes -- Typewriter (1867)
Sholes' major input was both the primitive typewriter and the QWERTY keyboard that was later developed to refine his typewriter. While the initial goal of the typewriter was the creation of a way to number book pages,…
Essay Doctorate
Sustainability Equated With No Growth? The Central
The central analogy of treadmill represented in the ‘Treadmill of Production' was a type of running in place as in a typical treadmill without moving forward. It symbolizes a gradual decrease in the efficiency of the productive system. The post Second World War USA's economic system was a type wherein every unit of ecosystem involved in the production system produced less support for the country's workers and their families. However for the investors, it was quite favorable as it helped in the speedier growth towards profits and returns on investments made. Its results worked wonders for the investors but spelled doom for the workers and hence sustainability is equated with zero growth.
Paper Doctorate
Don Quixote Brandon Lee the Novel Don
The novel Don Quixote is both comic and tragic. This particular novel opens by briefly describing Don Quixote and his fascination with chivalric stories. With his "wits gone," Don Quixote decides to become a knight and…
Paper Doctorate
Sergeant Alias) at Two Minutes
At two minutes past 10.00pm on Tuesday of the last week (30th October, 2011), Mrs. Kit Z. (41 years old) was walking with her daughter May (10 years old) in the Skokie suburb of her home district as part of an evening…
Case Study Undergraduate
Battle of the Aleutians a Cold Wake Up Call
This study concerns the Battle for the Aleutians which was the only time during World War II that Japanese occupied American soil and was the first incursion on American soil since the War of 1812. The Aleutian Islands were strategically significant during World War II for both sides but many military historians agree that both sides would have been better off if they had foregone this campaign. The purpose of this study was to provide a review of the primary and secondary peer-reviewed and scholarly literature concerning this battle to develop an informed answer to the study's guiding research question: "How might the American response to the Japanese invasion and occupation be directly linked to the chain of events in the Pacific, and did the ‘forgotten battle' mobilize Americans more than historians have admitted?"
Research Paper Doctorate
Odyssey by Homer - Books
¶ … Odyssey by Homer - Books I, II, and V. Specifically it will discuss Penelope's character and her faithful trust that her husband will someday return to her. Penelope is a faithful wife and a good mother who serves…
Research Paper Doctorate
Dominican Republic Taino Indians Used
Taino Indians used to inhabit the island, which was named by Christopher Columbus Hispaniola for at least 5,000 years prior to his discovery of America for the Europeans. The inhabitants of Taino were very gentle,…
Research Paper Doctorate
Religion and national identity
The Role of Religion in the Formation of National Identity
Research Paper Doctorate
Odysseus Is Not a Hero
Odysseus is often mistaken for being a great hero, and is often one of the first Greek characters to spring to mind at the mention of heroism. His great twenty-year journey after the Trojan War is one of the great epics…