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Military Leaders
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Military leadership sits at the intersection of political science, history, and organizational theory, making it a frequent subject in government, international relations, and military studies courses. The topic invites academic inquiry because it forces students to examine how individual decision-making shapes large-scale historical and political outcomes. Papers in this area often engage with foundational strategic thinkers — Clausewitz's paired concepts and Sun Tzu's Art of War appear directly in archived work here — providing theoretical frameworks that give analysis intellectual structure beyond simple biography or narrative.

The essays collected on this topic take a range of approaches. Some apply classical strategic theory to specific conflicts, testing whether frameworks like Clausewitz's remain useful when measured against the Korean War or the Vietnam War experience. Others focus on leadership lessons drawn from particular campaigns, such as the Falklands conflict, treating military command as a set of transferable principles. Comparative and regional perspectives also appear, situating military leadership within broader political contexts like Latin American politics or pre-colonial Mesoamerica.

A strong essay on military leadership requires a clearly bounded thesis — arguing for a specific quality, decision, or doctrine rather than broadly surveying a leader's career. Evidence drawn from primary accounts, official records, or well-established historical scholarship carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is conflating military effectiveness with moral virtue; a rigorous essay distinguishes between strategic success and ethical judgment, treating them as separate analytical categories rather than assuming one implies the other.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
Ancient Roman religion and its cultural significance
This essay examines some of the non-literary sources of information on ancient Roman religion, and particularly those spaces which demonstrate a confluence of the religious, political, and social. By examining three such spaces in detail, one can begin to appreciate how the centrality of Roman religion evidenced itself at every level of Roman life and representation. Ultimately, one is able to appreciate how non-literary sources of information on Roman religion can offer valuable insights into ancient practices and belief, above and beyond the understanding offered by literary sources.
Essay Undergraduate
South African Perspective on AFRICOM
This paper reviews the relevant literature to describe current U.S. military strategy in South Africa to provide salient policy recommendations that can be used between military organizations of the South African (Sub-Saharan Africa) and U.S. Africa Command. An analysis of issues such as military-to-military training and other military programs that make AFRICOM important to South Africa that protect U.S. national security and examine challenges to U.S. Interests and the instruments, institutions and approaches the U.S. might use to meet those challenges is followed by a summary of the research and important findings in the conclusion
Paper Undergraduate
Should General Motors be saved: reasons for and against
Introduction to the General Motors Bailout
Paper Undergraduate
State of Great Britain's government before the Revolutionary War
Any student of the period of the American Revolution may find themselves asking how it was that the British government in a period of just over a decade managed to transform a group of seemingly enthusiastic group of…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Western Civ Athens and Sparta
Athens and Sparta helped define the geopolitical landscape of the ancient Greek world. Located on the Peloponnesian peninsula, Sparta rested on a relatively isolated geographic position that fostered its insular foreign…
Research Paper Masters
Pakistan's Inter-Services Intelligence agency and operations
The paper discusses the development of Pakistan's ISI intelligence service. It argues that due to the overreliance on ISI by Pakistani leaders in the last sixty years, the ISI has become "a kingdom within a kingdom," with enormous power and resources at its discretion. The paper also suggests that, while currently the Army is the only force that can control the ISI, the United States can help the civilian government to take control of the ISI activities in the future.
Paper Undergraduate
Atomic bomb development, deployment, and effects on Japanese civilians
The Atomic Bomb and Its Effects on Japan and the World Modern Japanese culture is fraught with paradox. A nation constructed on ancient Shinto and Buddhist ideologies, its people have been conditioned to infuse…
Paper Undergraduate
Memo writing and professional communication
¶ … Successful Strategy in Ending the War in Afghanistan
Paper Doctorate
Leadership Traits in the Face
Introduction What leadership traits are needed when a military officer and his men are under fire in a war zone? How to real leaders respond to the terror of war? What qualities to soldiers look for in their officers as the troops are being led into battle? These and other issues will be discussed in this paper.
Paper Doctorate
United States involvement in the Vietnam War
President Eisenhower said the U.S. should not become involved in a land war in Asia. President Johnson said we should not send American boys to fight Asian boys' war. Yet, the U.S. did become involved in a war in Vietnam.