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Surveillance
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Surveillance as an academic subject appears across criminology, political science, sociology, law, and technology studies. Students engage with it because it sits at the intersection of state power, individual rights, and evolving technological capability. The topic raises foundational questions about how governments and institutions monitor individuals, what legal frameworks govern that monitoring, and how societies negotiate the boundary between security and privacy. Concepts like panopticism — the idea that the mere possibility of being watched shapes behavior — give the subject strong theoretical grounding that makes it appealing for courses ranging from criminal justice to media studies.

The papers archived under this topic reflect a wide range of analytical approaches. Some take a policy orientation, examining specific initiatives and weighing their positives and negatives within criminal justice contexts, including courts, corrections, and juvenile justice. Others focus on particular applications of surveillance, such as terrorist surveillance techniques, burglary investigations, or the role of secret courts in the war on terror. Still others treat surveillance as a broader social phenomenon, analyzing how forms of monitoring shape everyday life and the relationship between police, government, and individuals.

A strong essay on surveillance begins with a clearly scoped thesis — arguing for a specific position on a defined form of monitoring rather than trying to address all surveillance at once. Evidence drawn from policy documents, legal rulings, and documented real-world cases tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating surveillance as uniformly harmful or uniformly beneficial; strong work acknowledges that different forms carry distinct trade-offs and that context, including who is being watched and under what legal authority, matters significantly.

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Paper Undergraduate
SWAT History and Operations Special
Special Weapons and Tactics (SWAT) teams were created in the mid-1960s as violence in America grew to previously unknown levels and frequency. The Kennedy assassination in Dallas in 1963, the Watts riots in Los Angeles…
Paper Undergraduate
Immigration and Nationality Act (INA)
Why did 245(i) expire, why was it not renewed?
Paper Undergraduate
Theory and social policy
¶ … Social Policy: KiwiSaver as a Social Policy
Paper Undergraduate
Random Locker Searches in Schools,
Random locker searches in schools, what issues are at stake here? Student's lockers are supposes to be where the student locks their valves and personal effects to keep others away from them.
Paper Undergraduate
Censorship and technology in Fahrenheit 451
Technology and society: Ray Bradbury's dystopia Fahrenheit 451
Essay Doctorate
Security versus civil liberties in the Patriot Act
Arguments for and against the Patriot Act
Paper Undergraduate
Security assessment of the Northeastern US border from Maine to Michigan
The North East border of the United States is made up of mainly under patrolled borders and huge areas of waterways. The area covers the nation from Maine to Michigan and includes the majority of the Great Lakes.
Paper Masters
Increasing law enforcement to secure the US border
Illegal immigrants in the United States have always been an issue of great division and controversy in the United States. On the one hand, the country's image as safe harbor for those who would work hard to achieve…
Essay Doctorate
Conflict/Crime Control Model vs. Consensus/Due Process
This paper examines two models of the criminal justice system: the crime control/conflict model and the due process/consensus model. It examines similarities and differences in the two approaches. It looks at how the approaches impact law enforcement, prosecution, adjudication, and corrections. Finally, it asks the author to make a statement about which approach is preferred.
Paper Undergraduate
Morbidity and lung cancer: epidemiological patterns and clinical outcomes
Pennsylvania is one of the 7 states that has the second highest incidence of all states in eh USA with lung cancer rankling as one of its leading causes of deaths caused by all illnesses. 66.4 to 74.7% per 100, 000 citizens are diagnosed with lung cancer yearly according to the U.S. Cancer Statistics Working GroupOn the other hand, compared to most states, Pennsylvania also seems to show the second-highest level of effective treatment for lung cancer with only 47.1 to 52.0 annual deaths compared to the highest mortality rate level of annual deaths from lung cancer (56.8 to 74.6) in the mostly southern states. According to the Northeast Regional Cancer Institute of Pennsylvania, approximately, 3236 cases of lung cancer are reported annually in that state, making it the third largest diagnosed and recurring cancer preceded only by brain cancer (first) and female breast cancer. Men seem to have the greatest incidence (128) with women (99). This is the standard incidence ratio of every 100 cases. The annual mortality rates of lung cancer were 2,393 with the ratio being 104:86 males to females.