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World Peace
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World peace is one of the broadest and most enduring subjects in world studies, inviting analysis across political science, international relations, history, sociology, and ethics. Its academic appeal lies in the tension between idealism and realpolitik: students must grapple with whether lasting peace is structurally achievable or perpetually compromised by competing national interests, cultural divisions, and historical grievances. The topic encompasses questions about human rights, religious diversity, foreign policy, ethnic conflict, and the role of international institutions, making it genuinely interdisciplinary by nature.

The papers archived under this topic reflect a wide range of approaches. Some take a historical angle, examining specific turning points such as the creation of Israel in 1948 or the relationship between World War Two and social democracy between 1940 and 1955. Others adopt a comparative framework, setting U.S. foreign policy under different administrations side by side, or contrasting international policing strategies. Case-study approaches appear in work on apartheid, gang threats to national security, ethnic group conflicts, and Switzerland's civil-military relationship. More thematic papers engage with cultural relativism in human rights, religious diversity, Buddhism, and globalism as structural forces shaping or undermining peace.

A strong essay on world peace requires a precisely scoped thesis rather than a sweeping claim that peace is simply desirable. The most persuasive papers focus on a specific mechanism, conflict, policy, or ideology and argue a clear, debatable position about its role in producing or obstructing peaceful conditions. Evidence drawn from documented historical events and concrete policy outcomes carries more weight than abstract moral appeals. The most common pitfall is conflating world peace as a goal with world peace as an analytical framework — the essay should examine how and why, not merely assert that peace matters.

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Research Paper Undergraduate
United States Digressions With Current
Digressions with Current American Foreign Policy
Paper Undergraduate
The civil-military relationship of Switzerland and its neutrality status
Switzerland, a federal republic in west central Europe, is officially known as the Swiss Confederation or Confoederatio Helvetica (Heatwole 2009). Its people are an ethnic mix, mainly of native German, French and…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Social democracy and pamphleteering in World War II and postwar Europe, 1940-1955
Pamphleteering has a long history in England and became a means of expression against government policies in the New World as well. As the mass media developed, the practice of pamphleteering expanded as well as various…
Paper Undergraduate
Religious diversity: concepts, contexts, and contemporary issues
Remaining true to the Gospel in the midst of religious diversity and pluralism can be challenging for young ministers. Crises of faith are far too common in the midst of the schisms that emerge even between Christians.
Paper Undergraduate
Globalism: concepts, impacts, and contemporary perspectives
The phenomenon of globalization is a very controversial one, as some people are against it despite the fact that they are aware that the process is unavoidable. From the early ages people have felt the need to socialize…
Research Paper Doctorate
Information Systems and Technology Issues in Developing Countries
Technology has changed society in a manner much like the Industrial Revolution of the 17th century. The technology revolution started in the U.S. And the countries of Western Europe, in a manner similar to the…
Paper Undergraduate
Sufism, Jung, Kaballah Interfaith Dialogue
Interfaith dialogue and Peace negotiations: Jewish Kabbalah, Islamic Sufism and Jung
Paper Doctorate
Major wars and their impact on the century
Major Wars of the 20th Century: the Causes
Research Paper Undergraduate
President Carter's response to the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan
Before Soviet disintegration in 1990's, Soviet Union and United States were the two supreme world powers. The foreign policy of both the countries focused more on building close affinity with other countries,…
Essay Doctorate
The development of classical symphony in Haydn and Beethoven
Music, like other forms of art, evolved from numerous traditions that, when taken together, formed a new way of thinking about, and performing, certain types of works. Audiences change over time, and certain musical compositions that sound odd or strange to one audience are often accepted by others (e.g. the rioting during the premier of Stravinsky's Rite of Spring). When people think of classical music, for instance, they tend to think of the three B's (Bach, Beethoven, and Brahms). Certainly, these three giants of music were part of the evolution from the Baroque to the Romantic, each building upon one another's work over two centuries.