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Resilience
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Resilience is the capacity of individuals, groups, or systems to adapt positively in the face of adversity, challenges, and significant stress. It appears as a subject of study across psychology, education, social work, child development, organizational behavior, and military leadership courses. What makes resilience academically compelling is that it sits at the intersection of nature and environment — researchers debate how much of resilience is innate versus shaped by familial, communal, cultural, and societal factors. Because it touches nearly every aspect of human development and institutional function, instructors across disciplines assign it as a lens for understanding how people and organizations sustain function under pressure.

The papers collected here reflect a wide range of approaches. Some take a developmental angle, examining how resilience forms in early childhood and how social and emotional growth supports children's emerging autonomy and agency. Others use case-study analysis, applying resilience frameworks to individual subjects like the Antonio case. Several papers look outward at institutional contexts — exploring employee engagement, military leadership training, and supply chain logistics as arenas where resilience operates. Comparative and literature-review approaches also appear, weighing how resilience is defined across personal, familial, and societal levels, including the long-term effects of events like divorce on children's adaptive capacity.

A strong essay on resilience begins with a precise, scoped thesis that commits to a specific population, context, or definition rather than treating resilience as a vague positive trait. Evidence drawn from peer-reviewed research on developmental outcomes, caregiver behavior, or organizational performance carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is conflating resilience with stubbornness or simple persistence — a rigorous essay distinguishes adaptive, growth-oriented responses from mere inflexibility, grounding that distinction clearly in the literature.

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Paper Undergraduate
Lord of the Flies Main
Lord of the Flies ONE: Main characters, setting, plot, exposition, rising action, climax, falling action, resolution. The four main characters The main characters – Ralph, Piggy, Jack and Simon – play critically important roles in the novel, and each has a pivotal part in the plot and the exposition. Ralph is presented as the organized person, the athletic and productive person among the group. Ralph is a good-looking boy, better looking than the others and yet he is the quintessential average English boy. Ralph had pretty good spoken language skills, but when things get stressful, he can't always find the correct words to express what needs to be said. On pages 101-102, for example, Ralph was approaching the boys, who were assembled for one of their meetings; "…he went over the important points of his speech… he lost himself in a maze of thoughts that were rendered vague by his lack of words to express them." Early in the novel Ralph is incredulous at the barbaric behaviors of some of the boys, but later in the novel he gets swept away by the frenzied dancing related to the hunting of a boar and the killing of Simon.
Paper Doctorate
Work, family, and gender: interconnections and dynamics
Arlie Hochschild and Anne Machung's book, The Second Shift, focuses on the ways in which women and men in two-career marriages juggle both work pressures and their families' needs. The authors place a great deal of emphasis on the struggles to deal with the demands of work and the demands of the home in a manner that questions the concepts of work, family and gender in a way that has been highly debated and cited since the book's initial publication in the late 1980s. In presenting a new description of the life so many individuals live but barely have time to understand, Hochschild and Machung validate the struggles of the working woman as they attempt to resolve the "stalled revolution" of shared responsibility between themselves and the men in their lives in terms of duties at home and in the workplace.
Research Paper Doctorate
Karen Horney's contributions to psychoanalytic theory and practice
Karen Horney was a leading reformer and theorist in the field of psychology and psychoanalysis. One of the first major proponents of feminine psychology, Horney's ideas can be considered neo-Freudian.
Paper Undergraduate
Blood Passion Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times journalist Scott Martelle's book, Blood Passion: The Ludlow Massacre and Class War in the American West, is a book about labor history, unfair condition, and class prejudices.
Paper Undergraduate
Ecological Approaches Provide a Strong
¶ … ecological approaches provide a strong perspective to understanding complex relationships between humans & the biosphere?
Thesis Undergraduate
Media Framing and Public Perception of Hurricane Katrina
The Role of Media in Affecting Public Perception of Hurricane Katrina 'Victims'
Paper Undergraduate
Community Assessment, Part 1- Red
Red Hook is a neighborhood in south Brooklyn, NY that rests along an industrial waterfront. The region is predominately poor and mostly African-Americans reside in this area. The movie On the Waterfront was based on this part of New York and the famous international cruise liner, the Queen Mary, docks in this area. This neighborhood has experienced much change in the last decade with mostly positive economic gains and improving infrastructure.
Research Paper Doctorate
Hansberry's A Raisin in the Sun
How do the symbolism/references-allusions to light inform the play (plot/character)? & What does Mama's plant symbolize (look at the various places it enters into the play)?
Essay Doctorate
Self-efficacy and esteem in social development contexts
¶ … Professor Mead, whatever makes up consciousness has social origin. Inner consciousness has been organized socially through importation of the outer world. Other people's consciousness proceeds self-consciousness.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Play, \"Death of a Salesman\"
¶ … play, "Death of a Salesman" by Arthur Miller, the character, Willy notices his life is changing without his blessing, which has no control over. From there, while he will not accept his life is changing, he…