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Orphans
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Orphans as a subject of academic study appear across disciplines including social work, history, literature, public policy, and religious studies. The topic draws scholarly attention because it sits at the intersection of family structure, state responsibility, and cultural values — raising questions about how societies define childhood, vulnerability, and institutional care. Students are asked to examine orphanhood not only as a social condition but as a lens for understanding broader systems of welfare, governance, and moral obligation.

The papers archived under this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Literary analysis features prominently, with works like Oliver Twist examined for their portrayal of urban poverty and the lives of displaced children. Policy-oriented essays explore child welfare systems, the structure of Social Security, and debates over time-limited government assistance. Historical and biographical approaches appear as well, situating figures and events within larger contexts of displacement and social upheaval. Some essays take an organizational or comparative angle, weighing nonprofit versus government responses to vulnerable populations including children.

A strong essay on orphans benefits from a focused thesis that connects the condition of orphanhood to a specific institutional, literary, or historical argument rather than treating it as a background detail. Evidence drawn from policy records, literary texts, or documented case studies carries more weight than broad generalizations about childhood or poverty. A common pitfall is conflating distinct systems — foster care, state orphanages, and informal kinship arrangements operate under very different logics, and blurring these distinctions weakens analysis. Precision about which population, era, and institutional context is under examination keeps the argument credible and grounded.

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Paper Doctorate
Comparing Kenya's Health Care Delivery System
¶ … health care systems and resources of Kenya as well as the challenges and triumphs they have experienced in the past and what they predict for the future. The Kenyan government administers the health care system in…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Utopian Writers of the 17th
The stereotypical concept of utopia in the minds of the average citizen in contemporary American society - who is likely uninformed as to the literature and diversity of forms that utopia has taken historically - is…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Black plague: history, causes, and impact
In order to understand its contribution to the end of feudalism in Europe, it is important to understand the nature of the black Plague, or "black death," as it was known to Europeans, and its effects on individuals and…
Paper Undergraduate
Hospitality Management in the Church
Hospitality is a very important aspect of the church in fulfilling the church mission and as well represents a large portion of the hospitality market each year. The purpose of this study is to examine hospitality as…
Essay Doctorate
Department of Veterans Affairs Claims Processing Dilemmas
This paper forms the basis for a larger research project concerning the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) and the problems that are being experienced in its claims processing division. With more than a half million claims backlogged already and a flood of new claims coming in every day, things are going to get worse before they get better unless steps are taken today to address these constraints to the provision of high-quality services to the nation's heroic veterans.
Paper Doctorate
Ada Maria Isasi-Diaz an Analysis
This paper analyzes the mujerista theology of Ada Maria Isasi-Diaz and shows how it is rooted in the Liberation Theology of the latter half of the 20th century. That theology is focused on social justice and assisting the poor in their struggle for economic equality. This paper also includes my own understanding of the struggle through work with the poor.
Paper Doctorate
Illegal immigration enforcement and effects on children's futures
Returning American Born Children to Illegal Immigrants' Country of Origin
Research Paper Undergraduate
Corporate vs. Individual Responsibility: Enron, WorldCom, and Nike
As Beauchamp & Bowie stress within their work, it is true that individuals who come together in a group have the ability to collectively act in ways different from how they would act alone, but this does not give the…
Paper Doctorate
Korean American identity and experience
Korean-Americans have made a contribution to the American experience for over a century. The first wave of immigrants from Korea came after Japan began to exert its dominance over the neighboring nation.
Essay Doctorate
Speech by a Teacher Teachers in Public
Introduction Teachers in public schools are not permitted to invoke specific Biblical theories, parables, or otherwise invoke the word of God – either denominationally or generally – in their classes. The constitutionally imposed rule – separation of church and state – is widely considered appropriate and important to the American democracy within the secular and legal community. Moreover, the rules of public schools make it clear that it is psychologically, morally, constitutionally and socially unacceptable to stealthily (or otherwise) attempt to interject God's word or God's prophets' narrative into an educational setting. But a competent, alert and effective Christian teacher today need not break those rules in the process of presenting information God would approve of. Why? That is because there are values that God has emphasized in the Holy Bible that can be presented to students without ever identifying them as having come from God Himself. Some of the values – in particular, justice – will be reviewed in this paper. Justice, after all, is a universal value albeit there are myriad interpretations of justice.