Essay Topic Hub

Republican Party
Essays

382+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

382 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

The Republican Party is one of the two dominant forces in American political life and a central subject of study in political science, history, and government courses. Students examine the party to understand how political institutions evolve, how ideological coalitions form and shift, and how electoral competition shapes public policy. The party's history stretches from its founding through pivotal moments such as the post-Civil War Reconstruction era, westward expansion, and twentieth-century controversies including the Watergate scandal, all of which give scholars rich material for analysis. Its relationship with voters across racial, ethnic, and regional lines — including Latino and African American communities — adds further complexity that makes it a productive topic for sustained academic inquiry.

Papers on this topic approach the Republican Party from several distinct angles. Comparative essays weigh Republican and Democratic positions against each other on issues of labor, economic policy, and national values, while historical papers trace the party's development from Reconstruction through the modern era. Some work focuses on specific electoral moments, such as shifting Hispanic voter alignment in 2008, while others examine political communication strategies during high-stakes legislative debates or analyze the party's relationship with institutions like the National Labor Relations Board. A smaller number of papers situate the American party system within a broader transatlantic framework by comparing American and European political values.

A strong essay on the Republican Party needs a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad survey of the party's entire history. Evidence drawn from electoral data, policy records, and documented political events carries more analytical weight than general characterizations of voter attitudes. Writers should ground claims about what "Republicans believe" in specific platforms, legislative actions, or concrete historical episodes. The most common pitfall is treating the party as monolithic — strong essays acknowledge internal tensions, coalitional shifts, and the difference between voter behavior and official party positions.

Sort by:
Paper Undergraduate
U.S. Civil War causes and consequences
Discuss how and why Southern devotion to a system of slave labor retarded modernization in the South.
Thesis Masters
The war in Afghanistan
After the terrorist group al Qaeda attacked the United States on September 11, 2001, the American military was sent to Afghanistan to attack the Taliban, and destroy their governing position.
Paper Undergraduate
YouTube's appropriation of other media forms: cinema, television, and home movies
One of the most successful web sites since Napster, is YouTube. YouTube needs little introduction since the site gave meaning to the term "gone viral." The term defines the number of hits on extremely successful and…
Essay Undergraduate
Earthquake Response vs. Climate Change Risk Management
Risk Crisis Disaster Management Introduction Managing the problems related to global warming is quite different than responding to a damaging earthquake albeit both strategies require careful planning and coordination. This paper points to the contrasts between the two ways of management and response, and offers suggestions from the literature on pre-planning for both eventualities. Managing Strategies for Serious Earthquakes To say that a major earthquake that hits in an urban area is an acute crisis understates the problem, especially when an enormous amount of damage has been done. In Japan, one year after the calamity of a 9.0 earthquake and a devastating tsunami, some 300,000 people remain homeless and are living in temporary shelters. No amount of earthquake planning could have prepared Japanese officials for this kind of disaster. The International Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies reports that some 50,000 prefabricated homes have been built by the Japanese government, but "reconstruction of permanent houses has barely begun."
Research Paper Undergraduate
Anti-racism in American society
Racism is clearly one the greatest social conflicts in the United States and has been since prior to its development as a nation. The anti-racism movement has been around nearly as long, attempting to balance and…
Essay Doctorate
Interest groups seeking influence in public policy making
Interest groups are clusters of people that come into existent to make stresses on government. The leading interest groups that are located in the United States are financial or occupational, but a range of other clusters--philosophical, public interest, foreign policy, government itself, and ethnic, religious, and cultural--have memberships that cut across the big economic groupings; thus, their influence is both reduced and stabilized. Actions of great amounts of individuals who are irritated with government strategies have continuously been with us in the United States.
Paper Undergraduate
Race and Politics in 2008
The 2008 Presidential election marked a profound change for both major American political parties and the American electorate as a whole in terms of the way that race is conceptualized in American politics.
Research Paper Undergraduate
MISC 1600 1800
Although African-American slaves revolted in ways that ranged from subtle sabotage to downright murder of their individual masters, there were also several major insurrections. These rebellions only strengthened the…
Paper Doctorate
Ralph Nader Is One of the Most
Ralph Nader Ralph Nader is one of the most famously incorruptible characters in modern American history. Born of Lebanese immigrant parents, Nader obtained an exceptionally good education, and then single-mindedly took on the entire automotive industry's dangerous automobile designs. After Nader's initial victory and fame from Unsafe at any Speed, he was certainly not a "one-hit wonder," prolifically writing more than ten books dedicated to enhancing the public good, and founding several key organizations that doggedly fight for that same public good. His currently unpopularity reminds me of Abraham Lincoln's rabid unpopularity before the American Civil War. Though Lincoln was reviled, burned in effigy and ultimately assassinated in the 1860's, he now stands as an American model of honesty and resoluteness. Nader, who has incurred the recent wrath of liberals because his 2000 Presidential candidacy resulted in the election of George Bush, nevertheless continues to fight for the public good through his many books and organizations. History will probably be far kinder to Nader due to his relentless fight for the public good, which started more than 50 years ago and apparently will continue through the rest of his life.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Auto repair service overview and industry practices
Personal background analysis and organizational responsibilities