GUIDELINES FOR THE FINAL PAPER
All students must complete a research paper at the end of the semester to fulfill the requirements of the class.
The paper should be at least 10 pages long and there should be proper referencing throughout the paper. Academic Sources should be used. Do not use “Wikipedia” and other sources that are not academic in nature. Proper margins and a title page are required along with an extensive bibliography. The website has a site for you to go on to get sources and find information about your topic. Do not cut and paste from websites and when you use a website make sure that it is a credible website (such as the World Bank’s website-this is a great site for research on development and poverty and so on…) Do not just give me a website as a source,,,I need to see an author, date, volume # and so on….
Papers should contain descriptive information but quality works should contain good analysis and critical thinking. A good way to insure that you do this is to begin your paper in your introduction as posing your research topic as a question…Then you can devote the rest of your paper in terms of trying to answer the question that you posed or at least try to present what other big thinkers in the field are saying about the issue at hand.
HERE IS A SMALL LIST OF SOME POSSIBLE TOPICS. STUDENTS CAN DEVELOP THEIR OWN TOPICS BUT ALL CHOICES MUST BE CLEARED WITH THE PROFESSOR.
Military technology
Al Qaeda and internet
Taliban and Afghanistan
Pakistan and Islamic extremism
Military budget
U.S. Hegemony
Living with a strong Russia
Nuclear technology transfer
North Korea
Iran and the NPT
The United Nations and peacekeeping troops
Israel and Palestinian issues
Hamas
Hezbollah
Chinese Military issues
Japanese rearmament
The future of the NATO alliance
Darfur
Iraq : Civil War ?
Iraq: Democracy ?
Muslims in Europe
The Social Security Problem
The outsourcing issue
Women in politics
Global warming or any environmental issue
Energy policy
The flat tax proposal
The United Nations vs. The United States or UN reform measures
European Union
Poverty in Africa
President Chavez of Venezuela vs. The United States
U.S. Foreign Policy and the spread of democracy
The Rise of India and/or China
The US deficit
The US trade deficit
Poverty in America
Affirmative action in America