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Social Issues
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What is Social Issues?

Social issues are conditions and conflicts within society that affect large groups of people and provoke debate about collective responsibility and policy responses. Students across disciplines — sociology, political science, public health, business, and the humanities — engage with these topics because they sit at the intersection of individual experience and structural power. Courses that assign papers on social issues typically ask students to think critically about how forces like gender, health, and lack of access to resources shape everyday life, and why certain problems persist despite widespread awareness of them.

The papers archived here reflect a broad range of approaches. Some examine specific contested topics such as same-sex marriage or domestic space, using sociological analysis to unpack how social norms are constructed and challenged. Others take a more applied or policy-oriented angle, exploring how social and labor issues operate within supply chain management or how economic, political, and legal factors interact with social conditions in business contexts. Still others approach social issues through cultural and artistic lenses, treating hip-hop, punk ethics, or installation art as sites where broader societal tensions become visible.

A strong essay on a social issue begins with a focused, arguable thesis rather than a broad declaration that a problem exists. Evidence drawn from research, case studies, or theoretical frameworks carries more weight than general observation. Grounding claims in specific contexts — a particular community, policy, or cultural moment — sharpens the analysis considerably. The most common pitfall is treating a social issue as self-evidently important without explaining the mechanisms that sustain it or the competing perspectives that complicate easy solutions.

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Paper Doctorate
Post-Structuralism and Film the Objective
The objective of this study is to answer how the post-structuralist synthesis asks structuralism to account for its own structurality and begin to propose a theory of resistance to dominant cultural values and expectations and to dominant modes of film-making. This work will additionally answer if post-structuralism offers a third model of deconstruction and politicized intervention into first and second cinematic practice, how would one demonstrate that kind of analysis in a film such as Yol?
Research Paper Doctorate
Transportation Improvements and Accountability in San Francisco Bay Area
The process has been much more painful and has taken much longer than anyone anticipated, but today, by any measure, San Francisco is a world-class city. The Bay Area in particular is poised to become one of the most…
Research Paper Doctorate
Social contexts of development
The social influence on human development is discussed. The role of parents, teachers, peers, family members and work colleagues in an individual's development is reviewed. The theories of development that includes…
Essay Doctorate
How Educating Public Gang Crime Prevention
Educating the public on gang crime prevention is the key to understanding not only where this problem stems from, but the possible solutions available to remedy this. Providing the communities that harbor the most street gangs, will allow children to know that there are more opportunities than just resigning to the protection from a gang. Providing the communities that are better off financially will enable them to further understand the situation and be able to provide more support to these communities in need.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Controversial business practices and ethical implications
Teen Plastic Surgery: A Controversial Medical Practice
Research Paper Undergraduate
Senior seminar: research and scholarly inquiry
Before enrolling in the School of Human Services, I had worked with some volunteer organizations and was vaguely aware of the problems facing my community and others like it. Crime, juvenile delinquency, spousal abuse,…
Paper Doctorate
Global wine wars and market competition
Since the mid to late 20th century a shift has been occurring in how various wines are produced and sold around the world. At the heart of the dispute, is the battle between traditional (old world) and new world…
Paper Doctorate
Secondary Sources in Social Research
"The most fundamental drawback [of relying on secondary sources] stems from the fact that this previous research is likely to have been done with different aims… It may also have been based on assumptions, and even…
Essay Doctorate
Global Sustainability Can Be Defined as \"Meetings
Global sustainability can be defined as "meetings the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs." (Oskamp, 2000, p. 373) This can be interpreted to mean that the…
Essay Doctorate
Global Mindsets Importance of the Global Mindset
A global mindset is a set of cognitive skills and attitributes that allow for vision, openness, curiosity and cultural sensitivity when applied to business. Successful leaders know that diversity equals opportunity. This four page paper explores the definition of a global mindset and its importance to those businesses that wish to succeed on a global scale.