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Position
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What is Position?

Position as an academic topic spans a wide range of disciplines, from business administration and public policy to nursing, education, and personal development. Courses in organizational behavior, healthcare management, political science, and professional writing all prompt students to examine what it means to hold, argue for, or strategically occupy a position — whether that refers to a job role, a policy stance, a formal argument, or a place within an institution. The topic is academically interesting precisely because it sits at the intersection of identity, authority, knowledge, and strategy, requiring writers to think carefully about how individuals and organizations establish and justify where they stand.

The papers collected here take notably varied approaches. Some are analytical, examining how organizations and companies leverage employee experience and satisfaction to strengthen their competitive position. Others are policy-oriented, addressing issues in education, nursing practice, or public administration, including cultural diversity in nursing and the role of strategic planning in public policy. Still others are personal and reflective, asking writers to assess their own professional success, goals, and future plans. Case analyses and reviews — including examinations of leadership models in healthcare and the effects of deregulation on global finance — round out the range with applied, evidence-based approaches.

A strong essay on this topic begins with a clearly scoped thesis that specifies whose position is being examined and in what context — avoiding the common pitfall of treating "position" so broadly that the argument loses focus. Evidence drawn from organizational data, policy documents, professional guidelines, or concrete personal experience tends to carry the most weight. Writers should connect their specific case or argument back to broader principles, whether about leadership, institutional design, or professional identity, to demonstrate analytical depth beyond simple description.

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Paper Undergraduate
Mexico Religion and Mexican Resistance
Mexico is a nation which has throughout its history suffered violence, instability and a rapid-fire change of leadership that even to present day leaves it in a deeply afflicted state.
Paper Undergraduate
Presidency and the Congress From
Today's world is a rapidly changing place. Economic, environmental, social, and political turmoil is now commonplace. One only has to look at the last few years in American history to see the upheaval that is constantly…
Essay Doctorate
Socratic Dialogue Francois: One Thing I Don\'t
This paper is a Socratic dialogue on the subject of "Canada is a multicultural country." The four participants seek to define multiculturalism and apply these definitions to the Canada they have experienced.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Childhood Obesity: Texas Senate Bill
The state of Texas has passed a Bill to be enacted into Law, specifically Texas Senate Bill 73 that has as its' focus the reduction and prevention of childhood obesity in the state.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Fire Technology the Firefighting Industry,
The firefighting industry, like many others, face a paradigm of continuous change today. Not only is the world changing, but its needs and the way that it uses services are changing as well.
Paper Undergraduate
War of Independence
There are many reasons sited by countless historians and even the primary sources of the American War for Independence, that presume to encompass the causes of America's relatively early insurrection from the colonial…
Paper Undergraduate
Human Security Origin and Development
Dr. Mahbub ul Haq first introduced the concept as part of holistic paradigm of human development through his 1994 Human Development Report.
Paper Undergraduate
Color Conscious: The Political Morality
Define the following concepts and show their interrelationship: Social Purposes for a job and qualifications for a job
Paper Undergraduate
Catholic social thought: core principles and applications
The Catholic Church has become less directly involved in the political and governmental affairs of the world following the industrial revolution, but the critiques and commentaries of the Church and especially of the…
Paper Doctorate
Scientific Inquiry Into Extraterrestrial Life
In the early days of Ufology, researchers appeared too eager to verify sightings, which they then interpreted as evidence of 'nuts and bolts' spacecraft piloted by intelligent EBEs. Like numerous deities and other extraterrestrial visitors, EBEs are generally held to be concerned about human conduct. This concern was widely reported in the spate of UFO sightings after the Second World War and the beginnings of the nuclear age. Sensationalist reports merging with Hollywood fantasy led to a distancing of orthodox science from Ufology. Explanations offered by Ufologists frequently ignored Occam's razor, which is a rule against multiplying entities or - in general terms - a rule which says don't involve extraordinary hypotheses until the ordinary ones have been eliminated. The apparent resistance to falsification also contributed to Ufology's lack of credibility. However, modern Ufologists, such as Jenny Randles and Paul Fuller of the British Unidentified Flying Object Research Association (BUFORA), are strict adherents to Popperian-inspired scientific methodology, enthusiastically seeking to falsify EBE explanations and providing explanations which are acceptable to orthodox scientific opinion. In this respect the modern Ufologist is a debunker rather than a myth-spinning believer. Explanations in terms of atmospheric phenomena, hallucinations or hoaxes are generally expected from BUFORA publications. Over the years the BUFORA standpoint has been vindicated. So much 'confirmatory' evidence has been demonstrably unreliable. Photographs, which were once considered as hard evidence, are now held to have zero credibility because of the likelihood of fakes. With the advent of sophisticated image-manipulation computers whose work is undetectable, photographs unsupported by other reliable confirmatory evidence are unacceptable. Eye witness reports are also problematic as they are frequently influenced by psychological and cultural factors.