Essay Topic Hub

Terrorism
Essays

2,844+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

2,844 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic AI GENERATED

Terrorism is a subject examined across criminal justice, political science, international relations, homeland security, and public policy courses. It sits at the intersection of law, government authority, and political violence, making it analytically rich and genuinely contested. Part of what makes it academically interesting is that defining terrorism itself is disputed — governments, scholars, and legal systems often apply different standards to distinguish terrorist acts from other forms of political violence or organized crime. That definitional tension shapes nearly every subsequent argument about how states should respond to terrorist groups and their activities.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Some take a policy and legal angle, examining counterterrorism legislation, the Patriot Act, and Fourth Amendment concerns raised by counterterrorism law. Others adopt a regional or historical focus, tracing the roots of terrorist activity in areas such as the Middle East or Yemen and analyzing effects on U.S. interests. Additional papers approach terrorism through security and preparedness frameworks, covering interagency disaster response, homeland security structures, maritime piracy, and biological weapon detection. Comparative work also appears, with papers contrasting definitions of terrorism or measuring modern terrorist activity against earlier models such as Latin American urban political violence.

A strong essay on terrorism begins with a clearly scoped thesis — broad claims about "all terrorism" rarely hold up under scrutiny, so anchoring the argument in a specific group, region, policy, or time period produces sharper analysis. Evidence drawn from legal statutes, government reports, documented attacks, and established case studies carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is conflating description with analysis; cataloguing terrorist acts without connecting them to a driving argument leaves the essay without a defensible claim.

Sort by:
Research Paper Undergraduate
International Students Coping With Culture
Prior to September 11, 2001, approximately 40,000 students from Arabian countries studied in the U.S. After 911, due to assaults against Arabian students, the number of students from Middle Eastern countries dropped…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Economics of the Middle East
¶ … Abadie, Alberto & Javier Gardeazabal. "The Economic Costs of Conflict: A Case Study of the Basque Country. September 2002.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Theories of security and NATO's endurance since the Cold War
NATO continuous survival after the end of the Cold War still remains a mystery for the academic environment, for scholars, and politicians alike. There have been numerous theoretical debates on the necessity, reasons…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Cold War and Its Aftermath
The Cold War represented one of the most important periods in the history of the world. It did not only changed the way in which the political world was configured following the end of the Second World War, but, at the…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Torture and war: drawing the line
Drawing the line between what is torture and what is coercion, on one level, is an exercise in semantics. Mark Bowden, in his book, the Art of Interrogation, explores all the various words and their semantic…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Training of the Metropolitan Police
Brief History of the District of Columbia Metropolitan Area Police/
Research Paper Undergraduate
FISA Improving Counterterrorism Through Modernization
The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) has long been a part of the toolkit of the U.S. executive branch for responding to threats to national security from foreign powers.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Al Qaeda: Current and Future
Many people were heard to observe that "things would never be the same" following the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 and some even suggested the Osama bin Laden could consider himself a "dead man walking."…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Aviation Security and Its Impact
The economic prosperity and the security of the U.S. depend to a large extent upon the world's airspace utilization by the Nation and its global partners and the safe and secure operations of its aviation system.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Security concepts and applications
The security in most airports did not used to be much of a problem for anyone. For many years before the events of September 11, 2001, travelers did not think much about security at all, it was just something that was…