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1044.21446 Lincoln?s Emancipation Proclamation: Influences and Motives
This paper is an extended analysis of the motives and influences that had a direct effect upon President Lincoln's decision to draft the Emancipation Proclamation. The argument rejects the notion that the decision was fuelled by a moral distaste for slavery with the intent at securing freedom for all. Instead, the decision is analyzed as an attempt to undermine the South, improve foreign diplomatic relations, and appease Northern abolitionists
Pages: 8
Bibliography: 8 source(s) listed
Filename: 21446
Price: US$71.60
1045.21453 Conflict of Interest and the Law: Vice President Dick Cheney and Halliburton
This paper will seek to understand the federal laws relating to Conflict of Interest within the current crisis with the Vice President, Dick Cheney. By relating the current laws and codes that do not allow Cheney to receive payments from Halliburton during his political office, we can see how Cheney is on direct violation of these statues that deter criminal activity in Conflict of Interest issues in government.
Pages: 5
Bibliography: 3 source(s) listed
Filename: 21453
Price: US$44.75
1046.21457 Polygamy Laws in America: An Analysis
This five page undergraduate paper examines support for polygamy in American law. The author notes that in spite of constitutional support for the individual privacy and contract rights of American citizens that pertain to polygamy, the legislative and judicial branches of the federal and state governments have either proactively or passively condemned polygamy as illegal. It can be convincingly argued that legal support for polygamy extends back more than two centuries to 1787 when the Constitution of the United States was ratified by the states, but the lawful status of polygamy has not been recognized by the courts for social, political, and religious reasons.
Pages: 5
Bibliography: 6 source(s) listed
Filename: 21457
Price: US$44.75
1047.21462 The Relevance of the Marshall Plan to the Cold War
This paper examines the history and some of the broad details of the Marshall Plan that provided massive economic aid to seventeen nations in Europe in the historical era directly following the end of the Second World War. This paper describes some of the difficulties the plan faced, highlighting the manner in which the Marshall Plan actually exasperated tension between the United States and the Soviet Union.
Pages: 3
Bibliography: 2 source(s) listed
Filename: 21462
Price: US$26.85
1048.21464 Iraq and WMD: An Analysis of Bureaucratic Politics and World Events
This eleven page post graduate paper examines scholarly debates concerning Bush Administration policies about Iraqi weapons of mass destruction prior to the launching of Operation Iraqi Freedom. The author notes that in examining the role of bureaucratic politics in major world events, bureaucratic politics had only a marginal influence since President Bush was adamantly determined to remove Saddam Hussein from power regardless of the pretext ultimately offered to the United States Congress, the
American public, the United Nations, and the world community.
Pages: 11
Bibliography: 11 source(s) listed
Filename: 21464
Price: US$98.45
1049.21475 Kennedy's Wars: Berlin, Cuba, Laos, and Vietnam
This three page undergraduate paper is in the form of a book review of Kennedy's Wars: Berlin, Cuba, Laos, and Vietnam. The author notes that the book is excellent, for it objectively examines the international, political, and military issues facing John F. Kennedy, skilfully explains the dilemmas JFK faced, and analyzes why he was able to demonstrate American resolve in Berlin, Cuba, Laos, and Vietnam without provoking Soviet responses that could have led to an atomic holocaust.
Pages: 3
Bibliography: 1 source(s) listed
Filename: 21475
Price: US$26.85
1050.21494 Racial Profiling: Not Necessary
Racial profiling is, at its core, a racist policy that allows the targeting of specific racial and ethnic groups for the purpose of greater and unequal governmental scrutiny ? with no legal or constitutional justification. The end result is that in jurisdictions in which racial profiling is in effect, the members of the profiled communities live under the constant threat of random and unprovoked harassment at the hands of the police. From the police point of view, profiling makes sense: it allows them to place special attention on the population of people statistically most likely to commit crimes. Opponents of profiling make a very clear argument against profiling on the basis that it is nothing more than a segregation list, racist, and prejudiced policy that serves no real or legitimate purpose in the effort to fight crime. It is the purpose of this paper to explore both arguments, and to support the conclusion that racial profiling is an ineffective method of fighting crime and terrorism and that it should not be used.