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Rape
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Rape is one of the most serious violent crimes studied across multiple academic disciplines, including criminology, law, psychology, sociology, gender studies, and history. It appears in coursework ranging from criminal justice surveys to feminist theory seminars, partly because it sits at the intersection of individual behavior, institutional response, and broader social power structures. Its academic complexity stems from the need to examine not only the act itself but also how societies define, prosecute, and culturally interpret sexual violence against victims, particularly women and children.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Some engage in comparative historical analysis, such as contrasting the Rape of Nanking with other atrocities or examining genocide-era sexual violence. Others take a legal and case-study focus, analyzing specific court decisions like Doe v. Pulaski County Special School District or profiling prosecutorial strategies against sexual predators. Psychological and evolutionary frameworks appear in papers examining offender behavior, while feminist and gender role theories are used to critique how rape is understood and addressed at the societal level. Literary and satirical analysis also features, including work engaging with texts like Yalom's writing on rape as a social construct.

A strong essay on rape as a crime requires a clearly bounded thesis — whether focused on law, psychology, history, or policy — rather than attempting to cover all dimensions at once. Evidence drawn from court records, peer-reviewed criminology research, or documented case studies tends to carry the most weight. A common pitfall is conflating distinct legal definitions of sexual violence across jurisdictions, which can undermine the precision an academic argument requires.

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Research Paper Doctorate
Terrorism Who Leads the Group
Leads the group and who makes up the chain of command
Research Paper Doctorate
How Did Kennedy and His Administration Effect the Civil Rights Movement During His Presidency?
This paper discusses President John F Kennedy and how he was instrumental in the Civil Rights Movement. Kennedy tried to stay out of the situation for as long as possible. After Gov. George Wallace tried to prevent students from going to college, Kennedy finally had to act and delivered a speech where he spelled out his vision for the future which was equality for all.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Employment Law Early in 1978, Ed Harbour
This essay examines employment law and some of the more important aspects of this discussion. Besides these issues this assignment also requires a job advertisement. The ad was created by asking the proper and legal questions. A list of these questions is provided at the end of the essay as an example of how a legal interview can be conducted.
Paper Doctorate
Voices Let\'s Talk About Gender,
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Paper Masters
Ethnicity and Gender in Modern Conflicts Rwanda
Modern conflicts are becoming more and more inclusive from all points of view. They entangle all types of groups, regardless of their combatant or non-combatant status. They include not only men with specific training, but also affect women, children, disadvantaged groups. The means of war are no longer the ones traditional but rather include terrorist actions, subversive means of attaining power. Since the Second World War, the techniques, the definitions of combatant forces, as well as the means of waging war have dramatically changed, reason for which the outcomes are more and more unpredictable.
Research Paper Doctorate
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Paper Undergraduate
Thompson's "A Defense of Abortion": Key Arguments Analyzed
A Defense of Abortion Introduction The author of this piece, Judith Jarvis Thompson, supports abortion, she uses descriptive assumptions creatively, and she makes dramatic – even outrageous – examples as juxtapositions to develop her argument and make her points. She also employs value assumptions that are effective in her narrative. But Thompson's theses and her Socratic style of argument carry the most weight as she turns of the positions of the "pro-life" movement upside down as a way to make her own positions shine. Thompson presents all of this two years before the U.S. Supreme Court's historic Roe v. Wade decision, which is impressive in hindsight, given the intensity of the ongoing debate on abortion.
Paper Undergraduate
Prostitution and human rights
Abstract Prostitution is the act of engaging in wanton sexual relations for financial gains. Prostitution is considered a crime in most countries while some with an example of Dominican Republic decriminalizes it as a way of promoting collection of tax revenues, improving working conditions and freedom of occupational choice, safety and health protection, besides prosecution of perpetrators of violence against sex workers. Countries that decriminalize prostitution affirm that they do so to reduce vulnerability of prostitutes to additional exploitation and marginalization that would leave them without recourse to medical and legal protection. This paper challenges legalization of prostitution as a way of promoting every human rights standard that mandates the dignity of a person and equality for all. The paper argues that prosecution whether forced or by consent amount to violation of human rights.
Research Paper Doctorate
White collar crime and corporate fraud
¶ … white-collar crime. Specifically, it will focus on white-collar crime in America, including reasons why it occurs so frequently in the United States, and what business, industry, and the courts can do to combat it.
Research Paper Doctorate
Female friendships and their social significance
Anita Diamant's fiction, "The Red Tent (1997)," is her interpretation of the activities in the red tent, where the Canaanite wives of the first patriarchs dwelt and celebrated the facets of womanhood, such as…