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Torture
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Torture sits at the intersection of government policy, ethics, and international law, making it a subject of serious academic inquiry across political science, philosophy, and public policy courses. It raises fundamental questions about state power, human dignity, and the limits of authority. Students are frequently asked to engage with the practice from multiple disciplinary angles, including utilitarian cost-benefit reasoning, deontological frameworks such as those associated with Kant, and human rights law. The work of Alfred W. McCoy, whose book A Question of Torture appears directly in student paper topics, provides a historically grounded examination of how governments have authorized and institutionalized coercive interrogation practices.

The papers written on this topic reflect a range of analytical approaches. Many take a direct argumentative stance, weighing whether torture can ever be justified on security grounds or whether it constitutes an absolute violation of human rights. Others focus on specific case studies, such as the treatment of gay and lesbian individuals in Iraq and the international human rights violations that follow. Policy-oriented essays examine how governments legislate around torture, while philosophy papers apply ethical theories to interrogation scenarios, particularly around the extraction of information under duress.

A strong essay on torture requires a clearly scoped thesis that commits to a position rather than simply surveying both sides. Evidence drawn from legal frameworks, documented cases, and established ethical theory carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is conflating the abstract moral debate with practical policy without acknowledging that these operate under different standards of justification — keeping them analytically distinct strengthens the overall argument.

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Paper Masters
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Research Paper Doctorate
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Research Paper Doctorate
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Essay Doctorate
The war on terror's contribution to human rights abuse
The War on Terror & Human Rights Introduction The so-called "war on terror" – initiated by former president George W. Bush after 9/11 – has not succeeded in ending terrorism but it opened the door to numerous violations of human rights. A survey of verifiable, peer-reviewed sources in the literature show clearly that the Bush Administration and members of the military under Bush's command carried out human rights violations in the name of the "war on terror." In this paper instances of human rights violations by the United States – based on the war on terror – will be presented.
Research Paper Doctorate
Environmental history: Thoreau, Muir, Leopold, and Carson
Four pivotal people - whose collective positive impact on the environment and on society's understanding of the natural world is powerful - are featured in this paper. They are John Muir, Aldo Leopold, Henry David…
Paper Undergraduate
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This essay explains some of the unique contributions to history accomplished by Ancient Greek civilization. Greek city states are first examined to identify the political structure of the civilization. Greek philosophy , art , architecture and warfare are also addressed in this essay as specific accomplishments are explained and described in detail to contextualize these accomplishments.
Paper Doctorate
Identity Williams on Identity in a Series
This document contains a description of two thought experiments and arguments defined and explored by Bernard Williams in regards to identity and its relation to bind body duality and divisions. The paper essentially describes William's thought experiments in summary form, reconstructing the argument, though points out a key flaw in the reasoning that renders the argument moot.