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Police
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Policing sits at the intersection of criminal justice, public administration, and political science, making it a frequent subject in government and criminology courses alike. Students are drawn to it because law enforcement agencies hold extraordinary authority over citizens, and the decisions officers make—about when to intervene, how much force to apply, and how to engage with communities—carry immediate legal, ethical, and social consequences. The topic spans everything from patrol theory and departmental organization to constitutional limits on officer conduct, giving it both practical and theoretical dimensions that reward serious academic examination.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of analytical approaches. Some tackle use-of-force questions directly, examining deadly force, non-lethal weapons, and the legal and ethical standards that govern both. Others take a historical or comparative angle, contrasting policing eras or weighing similarities between police and the populations they monitor. Case-study approaches appear as well, grounding abstract policy questions in concrete events such as the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina or the challenges of policing individuals with chronic mental illness. Additional papers look inward at institutional concerns like officer stress, patrol effectiveness, and departmental adaptation to new surveillance and communication technologies.

A strong essay on policing needs a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad survey of the field—claiming that a specific policy produces measurable outcomes, for instance, is more defensible than simply describing how policing works. Evidence drawn from documented incidents, departmental data, and established legal standards tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is conflating description with analysis; explaining what officers do is not the same as evaluating whether those practices serve the public effectively or equitably.

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Paper Doctorate
The O.J. Simpson case
Orenthal James Simpson, more commonly known as OJ Simpson, became the most popular man in the United States. This popularity was not due to him being a famous football player who had the greatest running backs in America or any of his roles as an actor, but because he was the defendant in the most publicized and popular murder case in American history. It was the ‘Trial of the Century'. OJ was accused of the murder of his ex-wife Nichole Brown Simpson and another Ronald Goldman, who was merely there to deliver a pair of glasses, outside Nichole's residence.
Paper Undergraduate
Terrorists and Social Identity Theory
A common bias in western countries is to assume that Islam is the only religion that fosters terrorists, but the history reveals that Christians and non-religious terrorists have also appeared from time to time. This essay examines the Australian homegrown Islamic terrorist Jack Roche to better understand the motivation behind Tamerlan Tsarnaev's bombing of the Boston Marathon finish line last month and finds that social identity theory provides a reasonable explanation.
Paper Masters
War and Empire: The American
¶ … War and Empire: The American Way of Life by Paul Atwood
Thesis Undergraduate
Impact of Disproportionate Minority Confinement Contact on Communities of Color
Disproportionate minority confinement has been one of the popular topics in the social sciences' study. With an increasing degree of cultural diversity in United States, a need for tolerance shown towards ethnicity and race is required to be shown. However, various researches have revealed that there is an increasing disparity in the confinement of African American youth in local judicial system where the reported abuse and drug addiction is seven times higher in Whites. This disproportionate confinement has its negative consequences which results in undesired impacts on the African American community when they are operating in the role of a client, a social work practitioner and a citizen.
Paper Doctorate
Law Enforcement and Police Calls Police Services,
Introduction to Law Enforcement paper considering John Meyer's four categories of police calls: social boundaries, counter punching, emergency services, and nuisances. Discussion of streetwalkers versus call girls and the effects on public expectations versus realistic assumptions of solutions that the police can offer. Also a brief discussion that the ease of 911 prompts broad calls that don't pertain to police duties at all, such as malfunctioning traffic lights.
Paper High School
Four Major Ethical Theories: Kant, Utilitarian, Aristotle, Confucius
¶ … videos is carried out; with each review explaining a particular ethical approach using examples given in respective video watched. From the videos, four major ethical approaches are highlighted in the paper; Kant,…
Paper Undergraduate
Japanese gun control laws and regulatory framework
¶ … Land Without Guns: How Japan Has Virtually Eliminated Shooting Death, makes a comparative review of Japan's and America's deaths related to gun shooting. He begins by providing a case scenario indicating how…
Paper Undergraduate
MCJ_610_MODULE Insititution Understanding Social Myths
It is true that the stories should not get exposure in the media because of their status in the public. Most of the public believe that such crimes are impossible. Exposing the story about harming women would make it…
Research Paper Doctorate
Individual Rights vs. Public Order
Individual right - the right to privacy VS. public order - the need to use surveillance Cameras to deter crime.
Paper Masters
Sandy Hook School Shooting on December 14th,
The Sandy Hook school shooting was a United States tragedy. Twenty children and six adults were killed by Adam Lanza, who also killed his own mother before he drove to the school. The shooting closed the school indefinitely and also started a renewed debate on gun control. The town of Newtown, Connecticut will never be the same, and neither will the families who lost loved ones.