Essay Topic Hub

Taking Risks
Essays

135+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

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

Taking risks is a fundamental aspect of human decision-making that surfaces across a wide range of academic disciplines, including psychology, business, ethics, public health, and leadership studies. Students are asked to write about risk-taking in contexts that range from personal growth and moral responsibility to organizational strategy and social policy. The topic is academically interesting because it sits at the intersection of individual agency and systemic consequence, requiring writers to examine not just what risks people take but why, and with what outcomes for themselves and others.

The papers archived under this topic reflect a notably diverse set of approaches. Some focus on personal narrative and reflection, exploring individual decisions and their payoffs or costs. Others take a theoretical angle, examining frameworks such as Prospect Theory to explain how people evaluate uncertain choices. Leadership-oriented papers analyze how risk tolerance connects to transformational or charismatic leadership styles. Policy-driven essays tackle social questions around issues like minimum drinking age standards, equal pay, and academic dishonesty. Case-study approaches appear as well, grounding risk analysis in real organizational or historical contexts such as corporate decision-making and public health challenges.

A strong essay on taking risks benefits from a clearly bounded thesis that identifies a specific type of risk — personal, financial, ethical, or policy-related — and argues a defensible position about its causes, value, or consequences. Evidence drawn from research studies, historical examples, or well-reasoned policy analysis tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating risk-taking as inherently positive or negative without acknowledging the complexity of context, so effective essays engage seriously with counterarguments and competing outcomes.

Sort by:
Literature Review Undergraduate
Gambling Behavior and Purchase Intention: A Literature Review
Gambling has a paradoxical role in modern society -- while it is a legal and socially-acceptable activity, it can also be highly addictive and yield negative consequences for the bettor.
Essay Doctorate
ERP Vendors\' Knowledge Assessment Implementing ERP Systems:
Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems are used in manufacturing and services companies to interpret and act on demand while optimizing production scheduling while striving to maintain the highest levels of production quality possible. An ERP system, when functioning well, can be the catalyst of competitive advantage and strength for any enterprise (Elbanna, 2006). Infor, Oracle, SAP, and Microsoft all have extensive business units dedicated to developing, selling, installing and supporting their respective ERP systems. All of these companies have highly specific competencies and strengths, with deep vertical market expertise in smaller niche markets commonplace. SAP and their R/3 ERP Series of systems, which are the best-selling systems globally for nearly a decade. Infor has grown through acquisition and is partnering with Salesforce.com in the hope of launching a SaaS-based ERP system in 2012. Oracle's JD Edward's and PeopleSoft acquisitions, and the several ERP acquisitions by Microsoft show what the top priority of vendors are today. It's to act as a consolidator and acquirer of competitive assets, growing their companies as quickly as possible. In this acquisition-oriented mindset the focus has shifted off of the deep insights into what existing and new ERP systems customers need towards how to integrate their many acquisitions together (Forslund, Jonsson, 2010). This and many other factors support the contention that ERP vendors should have not have as much influence over buying decisions as they do. Instead, customer-centered methodologies should be developed that allow for their clients to better align these systems to unique business requirements and needs.
Paper Undergraduate
Strategic Management and Culture in the Bahamian Insurance Industry
The Bahamian insurance industry is divided into two main braches: one domestic, one captive and each operate without regard to the other, overseen by their own act of Parliament (Oxford, 2009). Within this field, around 100 companies are engaged in business, the bulk of them working as brokers, with just a few working as underwriters, working closely together when they do (Oxford, 2009). There appears to be a system of checks in place: agents aren't able to underwrite, and companies cannot engage in sales pitches to prospective customers directly (Oxford, 2009).
Paper Undergraduate
Leadership William Faulkner\'s Lo! Shows
William Faulkner's Lo! shows an interesting perspective on leadership. The President in this story is supposed to be the leader, but seldom takes a true leadership position. He defers the problem to the Secretary, which…
Essay Doctorate
Dissect Your Thought Processes and Clinical Interventions.
The group that I observed was one that was run by Sex and Love Addicts Anonymous, (S.L.A.A.). I participated in it as auxiliary observer. The groups taught me that All activities should be focused on the client him or herself and on treating this client as central rather than as instrument or peripheral to the process. The process should be catered around the client and the facilitator should (as Shulman (2005)) suggests be constantly attuned to eh client's needs. The first group was more sensitive to the client, but its lack of facilitator indicated to me the anarchy that can result when so skilled professional takes the helm. The two groups were almost totally polarized to one another in that the first too closely conformed to structure whilst the second transgressed it at its volition. Facilitators are needed, but the format needs to more flexible paying greater attention to client than to rules.
Paper Undergraduate
Second Language Lightbown and Spada
This paper consists of a series of reflections on several chapters from two textbooks concerning learning second languages. Pertinent topics that are addressed include the inherent difficulties of learning a second language, as well as different theories and perspectives on which method is most productive for learning a second language.
Research Paper Doctorate
Psychobiography of Chuck Yeager
¶ … Personality Theories in Chuck Yeager's Life
Paper Doctorate
Book review of "All the devils are here" by McLean and Nocera
Since the financial crisis started in 2008, there have been many who have tried to write a comprehensive analysis. A new book by Bethany McLean and Joe Nocera called All the Devils are Here is not a new take on the…
Paper Undergraduate
Prospect theory and decision-making under risk
The focus of the article is to provide an overview of prospect theory that was introduced by Professor Daniel Kahneman and Amos Tversky in 1979. The paper examines the use of the theory in decision-making and the field of economy. The other aspects discussed in the article are framing effects, especially bi-directional and unidirectional effects.
Research Paper Doctorate
Project Glider design and development
With increased competition and globalization, increasing numbers of companies are recognizing that they need to continually keep one step ahead of the other products and services in the marketplace.