Essay Topic Hub

Obama
Essays

808+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

808 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

Barack Obama's presidency is a major subject of study in political science, public policy, American history, and government courses. His two terms in office generated significant academic interest across multiple disciplines because they intersected with pressing national questions about race, economic recovery, healthcare reform, energy policy, and civil rights. The 2008 and 2012 presidential elections are treated as landmark events in American political history, making Obama a frequent subject for essays examining electoral dynamics, democratic participation, and the evolving priorities of the American public.

Student papers on this topic approach it from several distinct angles. Analytical essays examine the role race played in Obama's electoral victories, particularly in 2012, while others apply frameworks like rational choice theory to specific policy decisions such as the approval of international sanctions. Comparative policy analysis appears frequently, with papers weighing Obama's healthcare approach against President Clinton's proposals. Other essays focus on rhetorical analysis, treating speeches such as Obama's address to students as artifacts through which to study presidential communication. Additional papers assess specific policy areas including energy, housing, and gay rights.

A strong essay on Obama should establish a focused, arguable thesis rather than offering a broad biographical overview. Evidence drawn from policy outcomes, electoral data, or close reading of primary sources such as speeches tends to carry the most weight in academic writing. The most effective papers connect Obama's decisions to larger theoretical or historical frameworks rather than relying on general impressions. A common pitfall is conflating personal approval or disapproval of his presidency with substantive analysis — strong essays maintain an evidence-based, analytical stance throughout.

808 papers
Sort by:
Paper Doctorate
Dream Act -- Immigration Controversy the \"Dream
Introduction The "Dream Act" is legislation that was originally introduced to the U.S. Congress in 2001 and in 2009 it was re-introduced after being co-authored by Republican U.S. Senator Orin Hatch of Utah and Democrat U.S. Senator Dick Durbin of Illinois. The "Dream" Act in Dream Act is an acronym for "The Development, Relief and Education of Alien Minors Act." The Act is designed to allow young Latinos – who are technically illegal immigrants – to avoid deportation and become American citizens through a specific legal process. These young people were brought into the U.S. by their undocumented immigrant parents as children, but because they have never achieved citizenship, they fear the worst – deportation. Hence, the Dream Act would allow Latinos who at present are illegal – and who were under the age of 15 when their parents brought them into the United States and are under the age of 30 now – to remain legally in the U.S. for up to six years if certain requirements are realized.
Essay Doctorate
Heartland Data Breach May Well Have Been
¶ … Heartland Data breach may well have been one of the biggest security breaches ever perpetrated.
Essay Doctorate
Soaring Poverty Casts Spotlight on \'Lost Decade\'
¶ … Soaring Poverty Casts Spotlight on 'Lost Decade' (2011) by Sabrina Tavernise addresses the soaring poverty rate in the United States of America. According to information recently released by the Census Bureau of…
Thesis Doctorate
Don\'t Ask, Don\'t Tell Has Been Repealed
The repeal of Don't Ask, Don't Tell allowed gay people to serve openly in the military. That is both a blessing and a curse for gay individuals. They can now be open about who they are, but they have also opened themselves up to potential ridicule and other problems.
Essay Doctorate
President, the Pope, and the Prime Minister
This paper discusses the book "The President, the Pope, and the Prime Minister." The text discusses how President Ronald Reagan, Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher, and Pope John Paul II all worked together to take down the Communist threat in the world. It is argued that each had a hand in the destruction of the USSR and the rise of capitalism.
Essay Doctorate
Democracy and Military Intervention Democracy May Be
Democracy may be a way of life in the United States but elsewhere in the world it is a foreign concept. As democracy spreads around the globe there are many places where its development has been impeded by the…
Paper Doctorate
Supporting arguments through life experience and scholarly sources
The US finance and capital market fluctuates to both positive and negative events. It is argued that the presidential election in November 2012 in the US can have worldwide financial ramifications. There are arguments from economic agencies like Bloomberg that there is an importance of elections for the markets, but it is stated that some of the fears are myths. The US presidential election in November 2012 has got the financial market in volatile conditions. This it is argued is because of some individual perceptions. Some of the myths are that ‘party affiliation matters when it comes to market returns.' (Koesterich, 2012) There it is argued, no scientific basis for this contention. There is also the observation that when the democrat becomes president, the average return for the Dow Jones is 8.5%; for Republicans the average is around 6%".
Paper Doctorate
Classification systems for criminal offenders
There are several types of terrorism. The first is state terrorism. This is where the terrorist conducts the act against a foreign state or the people of a foreign state. State terrorism can also be of a political…
Paper Undergraduate
Stop the Current Recession From
¶ … stop the current recession from getting worse. Most agree that a massive fiscal stimulus is needed, but have different opinions about which types of fiscal policies would do the most good.
Research Paper Doctorate
US Health Care Reform
The role of the federal government in the provision of social programs has always been a politically and socially debated topic. The debate has regained momentum with Obama who has enacted a health care reform bill known as the Affordable Care Act. Tens of millions of Americans are uninsured in regard to their health, many at least partly because of rising health care costs. It has been estimated that somewhere in the neighborhood of forty-five million Americans do not currently have health care insurance and many of these are children.