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Suicide
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Suicide is studied across a wide range of academic disciplines, including sociology, psychology, public health, literature, and religious studies. It appears in courses on mental health, social theory, and literary analysis because it sits at the intersection of individual psychology and broader social forces. The topic carries intellectual weight partly because of foundational theoretical work, such as Durkheim's concepts of anomic and egoistic suicide, which connect rates of self-harm to social cohesion and individual alienation. Its relevance to depression, risk assessment, and family impact also makes it central to health and counseling curricula, where understanding crisis situations shapes professional practice.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a genuinely diverse set of approaches. Sociological analyses apply Durkheim's framework to examine how anomie and social integration contribute to suicide rates. Literary essays explore the theme through works like Shakespeare's Hamlet and LeAnne Howe's Miko Kings, tracing how authors use self-destruction to illuminate character and society. Other papers take a population-specific angle, examining suicide among police officers, military personnel, or students in America, while some address drug abuse, terrorism, and survivor support as connected concerns. Qualitative research summaries and counseling-focused pieces round out the range.

A strong essay on suicide needs a clearly bounded thesis — either a focused sociological argument, a close literary reading, or a defined public health claim — rather than a broad survey of causes. Evidence carries the most weight when it is specific: theoretical frameworks applied carefully, textual passages analyzed closely, or research findings interpreted accurately. The most common pitfall is conflating correlation with causation when discussing risk factors such as depression or substance abuse, so maintaining precision about what the evidence actually supports is essential.

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Paper Masters
Grandparents raising grandchildren: challenges and outcomes
Families in the late 20th and early 20th century are not the same as they were prior to World War II and even up into the 1960s. The idea of marriage is both a social and religious contract that is sanctioned by society as a valid contract and event. Depending on the particular society and culture, marriage combines the institution of family with intimate and sexual relationships, and the idea of the unit growing from this union. Traditionally, marriage has been with a man and a woman with the potential of having children, thus creating kinship ties to extended families.
Essay Doctorate
Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) in an Era
¶ … Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
Essay Undergraduate
Physician-assisted suicide: ethical and legal considerations
The topic for this particular paper primarily revolves around the concept of physician assisted suicide or otherwise known as physician assisted death or doctor assisted suicide. The paper provides a definition of the concept of PAS and then discusses ethics related to it followed by the supporting arguments for PAS and its procedure.
Paper High School
Illegal Drugs and Why They Should Be
¶ … illegal drugs and why they should be legalized. It is not that Block and Steinbeck disagree about making drugs legal, but that they disagree about why that should be done. Block's argument is mostly economic in…
Paper Undergraduate
Strategic Choice and Evaluation
MGM Resorts International is a major leisure and gaming organization. This paper uses Ansoff's matrix in order to assess the suitability of different types of growth strategies. The four strategy; market penetration, market development, product development, and diversification, are all explained and assessed to determine whether or not they are suitable for MGM. The paper ends with a recommendation for a grand strategy focusing on aggressive growth, leveraging the brand name, based on market development and product development.
Essay Undergraduate
The Morality of Physician-Assisted Suicide: Key Arguments
This paper discusses the ethics of physician assisted suicide. It takes the position that assisted suicide is not ethical and should remain illegal. It acknowledges that the argument that people should be able to determine how they die is a powerful one. However, it uses three arguments to argue against assisted suicide: the sanctity of human life, the possibility of abuse, and the implications for the medical community.
Paper Undergraduate
Romeo and Juliet: Teenage Love, Impulsiveness, and Tragedy
Love had the same meaning in the fifteenth century as it has today. However, when it came to the role it played in society and most importantly, in the formation of its basic unit, family, it was an entirely different matter. The love between Romeo and Juliet was similar to any relationship based on love at first sight between two teenagers today. Its characteristics were: impulsiveness, lack of second thoughts or pondering and rash decisions. It will end up in the protagonists' death through suicide because of some internal as well as some external factors. The young couple was blinded by love, eager to escape parental authority and egocentric. The parents were slaves to the moral and prejudices of their time. The odds were altogether, against such unions.
Paper Undergraduate
Social psychology concepts and theories
Social psychology, both as an academic and a professional practice, is extremely useful for elucidating the phenomenon of high rates of suicide within the military, and within the United States in general.
Essay Doctorate
Meta-analysis of adolescent suicide: methods, findings, and literature review
One of the leading treatments for depression are selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or SSRI's, however their effectiveness seems to be age related. In a recent study titled "Selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors…
Paper Undergraduate
Cyberbullying Misdirected Frustrations Lead to Bullying Others
Bullying is not a new phenomenon. Yet, today’s teens and children have to deal with an entirely new type of bullying online that is often more persuasive and even more harmful. The effects of cyberbullying are well documented. However, the reasons why so many youths today turn towards bullying each other online are often left of the discourse. In order to have so many victims, it is clear there are also a lot of aggressors. This research aims to explore the reasons behind some children turning to incidences of bullying others. It explores the problem through general strain theory, which essentially suggests that bullies themselves are victims of strain and thus take out their negative aggressions through bullying. Using a self reported survey with a Likert scale, this research aims to add more to the growing body of research suggesting why kids turn to cyberbullying.