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Travel
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About This Topic

Travel as an academic topic spans multiple disciplines, including hospitality management, business strategy, economics, and cultural studies. Students engage with it in courses ranging from tourism management to international business, where it raises questions about how people move across borders, how industries are built around that movement, and how economic and cultural forces shape both. The subject is academically rich because it connects individual behavior to large-scale systems, linking consumer choices, corporate strategy, and national policy within a single framework.

The papers archived under this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Some take an industry analysis angle, examining strategic management in hospitality companies and how businesses like hotels position themselves competitively. Others focus on tourism trends, exploring how tourism types evolve and what drives changes in traveler demand. Consumer behavior studies appear as well, such as work examining how customers in specific markets select low-cost airlines based on perception and cost. Additional papers address service delivery strategy and international trade and investment as they relate to travel-dependent industries, grounding abstract business concepts in real-world contexts.

A strong essay on travel should establish a focused thesis rather than broadly surveying the entire industry. Claims carry more weight when supported by specific market data, policy examples, or clearly defined case studies. Comparative analysis — weighing two companies, two tourism models, or two national strategies against each other — tends to produce sharper arguments than single-subject descriptions. The most common pitfall is treating travel as a purely positive economic force without accounting for costs, including labor concerns, environmental impact, or market volatility, all of which regularly surface in serious academic treatment of the topic.

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Essay Doctorate
Grand Canyon Is One of the Most
¶ … Grand Canyon is one of the most sought after destinations in Arizona, U.S. The landscape as well as the trails offered to individual traveler's offers a unique environment that can only be found here.
Paper Masters
Hilfiger to Sell on an International Basis
Today's international market is characterized by the customer loyalty and the competitiveness. Consumers need to buy such products or brands that deliver so uniqueness and difference based on quality, price and especially targeting the niche. Consumers of niche market are not concerned with the price, but they are much more concern with the quality of the product that they are buying. Tommy Hilfiger, an American symbol of prestige founded in 1985. It is an American based corporation that expanded its business into many places of the world. There are several factors that prompt Hilfiger to sell on an international basis that are the benefits of emerging opportunities that are available in the global market. Opportunities are based on the rising demand from the international consumers. Moreover, the competition among various brands made Hilfiger rush towards the international market (Doole & Lowe, 2008).
Paper Doctorate
The color red: historical, cultural, and scientific perspectives
Red is one of the oldest colors known to humans. It is a color that carries with it significant emotional meanings. Red occurs in nature on Earth and in the cosmos. It is a dynamic color affecting people and animals. The paper will explore the history of the color red with regard to its chemical properties, natural history, and cultural significance. The study of color proves useful and fruitful across a plethora of disciplines such as chemistry, advertising, psychology, and art. For many humans, colors and sight circumscribe reality. For such people, life without colors diminishes its exuberance and meaning. The paper addresses multiple topics regarding the color red reflecting upon the ways the color generates meaning for individuals and cultures.
Paper Undergraduate
Cellular Function and Aging Tumor Suppression Protein
The concept of aging has many intrinsic and extrinsic factors that act as markers on an individual organism. Ignoring mortality associated with external environmental factors, very few organisms can be said to have cellular immortality with no decrease in cellular function or repeat division in normal diploid cells. Cellular senescence is a normal process that halts cellular division after a set of cycles of replication. Senescent cells can remain completely functional but lose the programmed process of replication. The normal pathway for senescent cells is either aging with metabolic pathways continuing for the cell or programmed cell death which is known as apoptosis that occurs when cellular function changes, a specific lifetime is reached for the cell or the cell is damaged. The multicellular cnidarians known as a Hydra has been shown to have a complete lack of senescence in cellular function with cells dividing frequently and continuously and being sloughed off at the tips of appendages and new stem cells continuously repopulating (Watanabe 2009). The hydra organism effectively shows no aging (Martinez 1998) and studies of the Hydra genome show that the organism has a mutation in the expression of the p53 gene that manifests as a lack of p53 protein in hydra cells (Rutkowski 2010). The link between a lack of p53 expression and aging has been studied exhaustively with the inverse relationship between tumor suppression and cell immortality at balance with the expression of the protein. What has not been studied under such significant scrutiny has been the relationship between p53 expression and cellular senescence which is the halting of cellular processes to form a dormant cell. The tradeoff for having no pathway to halt cellular activity is continuous cell division and replenishment which the hydra has exploited to live an immortal life. For a more complex animal with differentiated organ systems the nature of p53 tumor suppression and "immortality" is a legitimate tradeoff between insuring that cancer cells become dormant and undergo apoptosis (programmed cell death) and renewing the organ systems of the body.
Thesis Doctorate
The last Kodak moment: decline of film photography
The paper is about the Last Kodak Moment. Kodak is a company known for its popularity and its downfall. There was a time when the company used to be the most popular name when it came to photography and cameras. As the media including pictures started to get digitized, the popularity of using films in cameras faded away. People relied more on having memory cards to take and delete pictures as they wished. Kodak was particularly slow to realize this change and even slower to act upon it. The company failed to adapt in time and went on to make unpredictable choices
Essay Undergraduate
High Degree of Misinformation I Had Received
This paper focuses on early Christianity. The course material covered in the paper covers Christianity from the first century A.D. through the period of the Crusades in the Middle Ages. This period of time covers the transition of the church from Christ-centered and led to the development of the Roman Catholic Church, which was led by men and had secular concerns and interests.
Research Paper Doctorate
Economic Accounting Financial Information Statistical Analysis and Computer Business Information System CBIS
¶ … marketing data collected to analyze the economic performance of the Hideaway Hotel. It consists of annual and monthly economic data, a forecast of next year's performance, and an interpretation of statistical data…
Research Paper Doctorate
Emily Dickinson's poems and literary significance
This paper uses three poems by Emily Dickinson---"Tell all the truth but tell it slant," "If you were coming in the fall," and "She rose to his requirement"---in order to illuminate Ezra Pound's poem "The River-Merchant's Wife: A Letter". The first of Dickinson's poems is compared to Pound's poem in terms of techniques of emotional reticence. The second Dickinson poem is compared to Pound's poem in terms of how it uses imagery. The final Dickinson poem is discussed as the most accurate parallel to what Pound has achieved in "The River-Merchant's Wife," because the two share a similar approach to dramatizing female psychology.
Paper Masters
History of Underwater Archeological Sites in the United States
This paper examines underwater archaeology in the U.S. The paper discusses excavation techniques, tools and technology and also explores the Clovis theory. The paper also reviews findings at several submerged North American prehistoric archeological sites. Underwater survey and excavation are typically more expensive and logistically more complex than comparable terrestrial projects. Underwater conditions involve more variability from site to site, and even from hour to hour at the same site. All survey and excavation work is constrained by safety factors; in general the deeper the site, the less time that a scuba diver can remain at that depth. Other factors that are frequently less than ideal include water currents, temperature, and visibility.
Thesis Doctorate
Seaports Vulnerability to Submersible Vessels
This paper explains the issue of understanding how to secure and protect the seaports of the country. The topic of discussion is also related to the protection of seaports of the country from different types of attacks that have happened by submersible vessels. Examples of such attacks include nuclear attacks and submersible vessels.