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White House
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The White House serves as both the physical residence of the United States president and a symbol of executive power, making it a central subject in political science, history, and public policy courses. Students write about it to understand how the American presidency functions, how individual leaders shape the office, and how the executive branch interacts with the broader government and the nation. The recurring focus on the presidency, the role of the office, and its relationship to Americans and their country reflects how deeply this institution shapes domestic and foreign policy alike.

The archived papers approach the White House from a wide range of angles. Many focus on individual presidents and their administrations, including figures such as Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, George W. Bush, Ulysses S. Grant, and Jimmy Carter, examining how each shaped or was shaped by the office. Others take historical and scandal-driven approaches, such as analysis of the Teapot Dome Scandal involving Albert B. Fall. Some papers address security planning, global terrorism, and policy frameworks, while others explore the democratic nomination process and comparative analysis of federal and state governments.

A strong essay on the White House benefits from a clearly scoped thesis — focusing on a specific president, policy era, or institutional function rather than attempting to survey the office broadly. Evidence drawn from executive decisions, legislative relationships, and historical outcomes tends to carry the most weight. A common pitfall is treating the presidency as isolated from Congress, the courts, and public pressure, which underestimates the institutional constraints that define how power in the White House is actually exercised.

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Paper Doctorate
Birth of a Nation: Epic
This paper examines the W.D. Griffith film, The Birth of a Nation, from both a cultural perspective and from a filmmaking perspective. Culturally, the film reinforced the worst stereotypes about African Americans, while justifying and excusing the Ku Klux Klan. At the same time, Griffith employed innovation in his storytelling approach and the filming of the movie, advancing the movie industry.
Research Paper Doctorate
Voter registration processes and requirements
Voting is one of the most important rights in a democratic society. In the United States, this right has been intermittently fought for by minority groups such as black people, women and others.
Research Paper Doctorate
George W. Bush and Condoleezza Rice Was This a Strategic Move
¶ … George W. Bush White House [...] Bush's appointment of Condoleezza Rice and her success in the George W. Bush cabinet. The Bush White House has been shedding cabinet members since re-election in November, but one…
Paper Doctorate
Political Protest the Current \"Occupy: (Insert Location
The current "Occupy: (insert location name here)" movement is something that has been on the minds of many over the last few weeks and months, not because the awareness of the issues are new but mostly because the…
Paper Doctorate
Similarities and differences between Pearl Harbor and 9/11
Sixty years separate two of the most infamous events in American history. Both the terrorist attacks on 9/11 and the Japanese raid on Pearl Harbor were defining moments that altered the course of history. Both caught the country by surprise, rallied its people against their attackers and engendered a long and difficult war against tyranny.
Research Paper Doctorate
19th Amendment and Women\'s Issues
Sections 1 and 2 of the 19th amendment to the U.S. Constitution read:
Research Paper Undergraduate
Duane Schultz Book (the Dahlgren
¶ … Duane Schultz book (the Dahlgren Affair) effectively utilizes the themes of history, drama, bloodshed, war, politics and mystery to weave a tale that originated during the Civil War.
Paper Undergraduate
U.S. governance practices and institutional structures
Government for the people, by the people is one ideal that has been reduced to nothing but wishful thinking as one government after another chose to have lower public impact on its governance practices.
Essay Doctorate
Toxins Cause Autism? The Jury Is Still
Nicholas Kristoff's writes about the issue of environmental toxins and autism, and the link between exposure to these toxins and the rise in autism spectrum disorders. Autism comprises a clinically heterogeneous group…
Paper Undergraduate
Research paper on major topics
The discipline of accounting has come a long way, as the following essay, shows. From its simple roots in the backwoods of Assyria 7000 years ago where traders haggled with one another over their goods and recorded them in cuneiform on rocks and wax tablets, accounting has ballooned into a growing morass of rules, regulations and controls in order to check corruption. Need to check corruption, in turn came about, as the world itself grew more complex and traders developed into simple businesses that then became firms with various investors, before gradually merging into the international corporations that we have today. Accountancy developed to reflect synchronous business complexity and evolved in a field that became extraordinarily complex and is still growing