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War
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What is War?

War is one of the most enduring subjects in historical study, examined across disciplines including political science, literature, ethics, public policy, and military history. Its academic appeal lies in the way it forces analysis of human conflict at every scale — from individual experience to international consequence. Students encounter the topic in courses on modern history, political theory, and even literary criticism, where works like Wallace Stevens's "The Death of a Soldier" and E. E. Cummings's poetry offer windows into how armed conflict shapes culture and identity. Ethical frameworks such as Just War Theory further anchor the subject in philosophical inquiry, asking students to weigh the morality of violence against political necessity.

The papers archived on this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Some focus on specific conflicts — the Vietnam War, the Korean War, and World War One trench warfare — using historical case studies to evaluate military strategy, soldier experience, or the applicability of concepts drawn from theorists like Clausewitz. Others take a policy angle, examining the War on Drugs, prison overcrowding, and the effects of war on public administration and its agencies. A number of papers address the human cost of conflict, including PTSD in veterans, domestic violence, and the well-being of military children during deployments.

A strong essay on war requires a focused thesis that commits to a specific argument rather than surveying broad events. Evidence drawn from primary sources, policy documents, or close literary analysis tends to carry the most weight. The most common pitfall is conflating narrative summary with analysis — describing what happened in a conflict is far less valuable than explaining why it unfolded as it did and what consequences followed.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
Henry VIII and his reign in English history
Henry VIII -- Architect of Renaissance England
Research Paper Undergraduate
Internal problems in America during the War of 1812
The war was unpopular with many Americans because of many different reasons. First, the war was largely unplanned, and American was not prepared. They didn't have enough supplies or money to pay the men, and they…
Paper Undergraduate
Obama and McCain's approaches to economy, taxes, and Iraq
John McCain and Barack Obama both have sophisticated strategies to deal with the struggling economy. The McCain policy is based on old-school Republican economics. For example, the McCain plan calls for the lowering of…
Paper Undergraduate
Lessons Learned on Yom Kippur
The Soviet Union violated a treaty with the United States when it attacked Israel on October 6, which is the Jewish holy day of Yom Kipper and the conflict in the Middle East nearly became a conflict between the two…
Paper Doctorate
Korean American identity and experience
Korean-Americans have made a contribution to the American experience for over a century. The first wave of immigrants from Korea came after Japan began to exert its dominance over the neighboring nation.
Paper Undergraduate
UNIX Is, Likely, the Oldest
UNIX is, likely, the oldest operating system still in widespread use today, and still containing bits of code and philosophy generated sometime in the 1970s by predecessors of the Free Software Movement.
Research Paper Doctorate
Mrs. Dalloway and a Streetcar Named Desire
Septimus and Blanche: Victims of Patriarchal Culture
Research Paper Doctorate
Ethnicity, Culture or Counseling Diveristy
Ethnicity, culture, or counseling diversity: Cultural diversity and Children
Paper High School
Hacktivism and tensions in American culture
Those who are seen by society as generally incompetent are likely to take full advantage of whatever realm they can gain a sense of competence and even mastery in. Hackers came from the ranks of the disenfranchised, although they were not disenfranchised in the ways that that term has generally been applied. They were not disenfranchised by virtue of race or gender or age or class or any other demographic quality. Rather they were disenfranchised simply because they could not fit in. This gave them a natural alliance with others who could not fit in to whatever society they lived in and for whatever reason. When hacking became hacktivism, this empathy for the underdog would often translate into empathy for human rights activists in repressive regimes.
Paper Undergraduate
Rethinking Military History the Goal
This review of Jeremy Black's Rethinking Military History examines the strengths and weaknesses of Black's argument, highlighting the way he perpetuates one of the central problems with military historiography while challenging many others. Black's book suffers because it does not sufficiently account for the influence of military structures themselves on the practice of military history, and as such cannot sufficiently describe the root cause of the problems he identifies. Nevertheless, his book offers important insights into the practice of military history, and well as historical scholarship as a whole.