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Search results on "INDICTMENT":

Essay # 36102 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Indictment, 2002.
A review of "The Indictment: A Superior-Subordinate Confrontation".
900 words (approx. 3.6 pages), 1 source, £ 24.95
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Abstract
A paper on "The Indictment: A Superior-Subordinate Confrontation" which answers various questions from the case.
Essay # 105473 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Social Work Case of a Child Corruption Indictment, 2008.
Presents a social work case study of a 42-year old woman addicted to crack cocaine.
2,579 words (approx. 10.3 pages), 10 sources, APA, £ 54.95
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Abstract
This paper describes a social work case opened when it was discovered that a mother was using her developmentally challenged daughter for sex in order to earn an income to buy drugs. The paper outlines all the assessments that need to be carried out in such a case before a satisfactory conclusion can be reached.

Outline:
Summary of the Case
Policy Analysis
Assessment Outline
Agency Assessment
Conclusion

From the Paper
"Doe lacks any sense of a family or community support system. She has no strong connection to any organization or family member. Her strongest connections are her drug sources.
Doe's goal is to get her child back as soon as possible. However, caseworkers have concerns about Doe's sincerity about cooperation as she has a history of not following through with service providers.
"Policy Analysis
The main focus of this case is the best interest of the child. Therefore, all services provided to Doe must be to allow her to establish herself as being in the best interest of her child. Without this foundation, Doe will not be able to get her child returned to her."
Essay # 31596 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Press Release: The Who Me Indictment, 2002.
Written in the form of a press release describing the case where a man could not be prosecuted for a crime he committed due to a problematic search of his home.
1,650 words (approx. 6.6 pages), 2 sources, £ 43.95
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Abstract
This paper presents a sample press release from a prosecutor attorney office to the press and public regarding the case of a man who was not prosecuted for a crime he committed. He was not prosecuted because the search of his residence was deemed improper therefore the judge suppressed all evidence found in the search and the victim could not identify the assailant. Many points of court and law are discussed.
Essay # 91779 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Martha Stewart, 2007.
An overview of the factors surrounding Martha Stewart's indictment.
1,004 words (approx. 4.0 pages), 4 sources, MLA, £ 24.95
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Abstract
This paper examines how Martha Stewart, the CEO of 'Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia, Inc', was found guilty on almost nine criminal counts including conspiracy, obstruction of justice and securities fraud. It looks at her life and the events leading up to her indictment and discusses whether she handled her indictment responsibly.

Outline
Introduction
The Martha Story
The ImClone Scandal
Handling of Indictment
Conclusions

From the Paper
"The ImClone Scandal shattered Martha's image and perfectionist persona. In the month of December, she was tipped by an assistant with the Merrill Lynch Company of stockbrokers regarding the stock of ImClone System, a pharmaceutical company. The Chairman of the Company was going to sell stock because of an upcoming bad report by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) on Erbitux, which had been thought to be a successful anti-cancer drug. Martha based on the tip sold her stock to save herself the petty profit. "She had 3,928 shares in ImClone worth $58.43 each, or a total of $229,513. If she had waited she would have sold stock that had slipped to $45.39. That would have meant she would have incurred a loss of $51,222" (Stephen, 2004)."
Essay # 99685 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"The Jungle", 2007.
An analysis of Upton Sinclair's indictment of wage slavery in "The Jungle".
1,407 words (approx. 5.6 pages), 1 source, MLA, £ 32.95
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Abstract
This paper discusses how, in his evocative expose detailing the evils of the Chicago meat packing industry appositely titled "The Jungle", Upton Sinclair launches a searing indictment of wage slavery. It examines how according to Sinclair, the Beef Trust ruthlessly exploited workers, subjecting them to a grueling fate worse than chattel slaves. It looks at how he constructs his indictment of wage labor through his protagonist's rude awakening of the cruel system, his frequent analogy of workers to animals and the packing district to a grand machine, as well as by providing a litany of the unfair labor practices that kept the trusts in business.

From the Paper
"In order to illustrate the miserable condition of labor in the stockyards, Sinclair often constructs parallels equating workers with animals. He addresses those who challenged the plight of workers and the cause of the unions claiming workers were trying to "restrict the productive capacity of the factories." Sinclair responds in saying that no one really understood the message of the unions; the "editors of newspapers, and statesmen, and presidents of employers' associations and universities" didn't understand that "what the unions were trying to do was to put a stop to murder." "
Essay # 42933 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Patrick White on Christianity, 2002.
An overview of the indictment of Christianity in Patrick White's "A Fringe of Leaves".
1,900 words (approx. 7.6 pages), 4 sources, £ 50.95
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Abstract
This paper will study several aspects of White's depiction of theological issues in general, and Christianity in particular, in "A Fringe of Leaves". It will be argued that White perceives a disconnect between the public theology of imperialist Christianity, and its irrelevance as a belief system for individuals confronted by the random chaos of the human experience.
Essay # 10937 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Voltaire's Treatment of Jesuit Order, 2001.
Discusses indictment of Catholic Church in "Candide."
1,125 words (approx. 4.5 pages), 6 sources, £ 27.95
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From the Paper
"St. Ignatius of Loyola founded the Jesuits in 1534 with the goal of spreading the word of the Catholic Church by preaching, teaching or doing whatever else was deemed necessary for the conversion of the heathens. Foiled in the desire to wage war in the Holy Land because of the current war with the Ottoman Empire, the group became the apostles of the Counter Reformation, establishing hundreds of schools and colleges throughout Europe, as well as missions throughout the world. Because of the dedication to the papacy, the group was often reviled, and in 1773, Pope Clement XIV issued a brief suppressing the order, which was overturned in 1814 by Pope Pius VII. One must be careful to avoid the implication that the ..."
Essay # 17469 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Sinclair Lewis' "Arrowsmith", 1985.
This paper examines the themes of Sinclair Lewis' novel "Arrowsmith" and its indictment of the medical profession.
1,125 words (approx. 4.5 pages), 5 sources, £ 27.95
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From the Paper
"The novel Arrowsmith (1924), by Sinclair Lewis looks at the experiences of a central hero named Martin Arrowsmith and his pursuit of a medical career. Lewis uses his book to examine several historical trends and controversies in the medical profession at the turn of the nineteenth century. More specifically, at the time Martin Arrowsmith is beginning his training to become a doctor, he must grapple with the dilemma of whether to pursue pure scientific research which many established doctors and medical educators dismiss as nonprofitable and too isolated from the actual treatment of patients. Thus, the central theme of this novel is the hero's struggle to come to terms with the conflict, between pure scientific research or the pursuit of greater profits through the care of patients, which consumed the late nineteenth and early twentieth century medical . "
Essay # 21845 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The Pre Civil War Republicans in Literature, 1995.
This study compares pre-Civil War Republicans' indictment of slavery, slaveholding society, and the South, as presented in Eric Foner's "Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men: The Ideology of the Republican Party Before the Civil War", with Harriet Beecher Stow
2,250 words (approx. 9.0 pages), 2 sources, £ 56.95
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From the Paper
"This study will compare and contrast the Republicans' indictment of slavery, slaveholding society, and the South, as presented in Eric Foner's "Free Soil, Free Labor, Free Men: The Ideology of the Republican Party Before the Civil War", with Harriet Beecher Stowe's indictment of the same entities in her novel "Uncle Tom's Cabin". The essential position of the study is that the Republicans' indictment is based on practical, pragmatic, and economic grounds, while Stowe's indictment is based on ethics, religion and passion.

It will be the additional argument of the study that racism, religion and "small-r" republican ideology played differing roles, with these differences in part shaped by gender contrasts. That is, Stowe's womanhood, it can be fairly argued, allowed her to consider the ethical and religious issues involved in slavery."
Essay # 12481 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
George Orwell, "Animal Farm", 1997.
Analyzes the novel as a symbolic indictment of Soviet totalitarianism.
1,350 words (approx. 5.4 pages), 1 source, £ 33.95
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From the Paper
"George Orwell in Animal Farm use animals as characters in his portrayal of the evils of totalitarianism. The taking over of a farm by the animals represents the taking over of Russia by the communists, and the corruption of power exercised by the pigs in Orwell's book represents the corrupt and abusive leadership of Stalin and his fellow totalitarians in the Soviet Union. The work is meant to be a satirical blast both at the Soviet communists and at any in the West who still believed that communism offered an ideal approach to the achievement economic and political justice in the world.

In this story, Orwell deals with the most basic of human needs and how these needs are denied in the animal farm representing Soviet totalitarianism. The pig leaders on the animal farm gradually begin to grant themselves certain ..."
Essay # 52591 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"Songs of Innocence and Experience", 2002.
An analysis of William Blake's poetry, including "The Garden of Love" and "The Little Vagabond".
2,414 words (approx. 9.7 pages), 1 source, MLA, £ 51.95
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Abstract
An extremely close reading of two poems in "Songs of Experience". The essay analyzes "The Garden of Love" and "The Little Vagabond." Read in isolation, ?The Little Vagabond? might be interpreted as an indictment of liquor and the ways in which the formidable substance has degraded religious virtue. However, when read in context with ?The Garden of Love,? the poetic dialogue suggests that the Church has both created and nourished this schism of physical and spiritual. Examined as a cohesive pair, ?The Garden of Love? and ?The Little Vagabond? create a resounding indictment on the evolution of the Church and its effect on future generations.

From the Paper
"William Blake's ?Songs of Innocence and Experience? depict a dialogue between "contrary states of the soul" which manifest in "shifting tensions" that are designed to reveal the inextricable interplay between the two qualities. (16) Although these two ?states? are ?contrary? the former characterized by resilient purity, the latter by irreversible bitterness, they interact with one another to produce syntheses in turn beginning a new dialectic. Growth emerging from ?strife? generates direction, negating any notion of stagnancy within either contrary. (17) Jaded and melancholic in tone, the Songs of Experience offer a recurring theme of "blighted and embittered children." (17) The discrepancy presented between the mental and physical age of ?blighted? children locates the remedy for the disjunction in the child?s search to reunite these entities."
Essay # 108784 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
Jonathan Swift's "Gulliver's Travels", 2008.
A discussion and and analysis of Jonathan Swift's condemnation of human nature in his famous novel, "Gulliver's Travels".
1,530 words (approx. 6.1 pages), 3 sources, APA, £ 35.95
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Abstract
This paper analyzes Jonathan Swift's "Gulliver's Travels" and how it is an indictment of humanity. The paper explains that, in "Gulliver's Travels", Swift seeks to condemn human nature as being a state that is assimilated by all in terms of unthinking servitude to individuals' own desires and needs, which conflict and contrast to create a sort of messy chaos that is not ruled by reason or logic. The paper relates that Swifts condemnation of human nature is not light satire. Rather it is a general indictment of humanity as being naturally loathsome and horrible to behold. That is, Swift does not see any saving grace in civilization, but instead concentrates on the innate debasement of humanity.

From the Paper
"When the narrator accepts that the horses are his social superiors and masters, he does so after some amount of discussion, having learned their language enough to give a rather proud account of his native land, which is summarily dismissed by the horses as being typical of Yahoo behavior. The horses remark that it is not unheard of in their land to also see Yahoos squabbling and killing each other over certain minerals, and that the dominant Yahoo is also surrounded by fawning subservient attendants who herd female
Yahoos into his camp and help to clean the lead Yahoo's feet and behind."
Essay # 104746 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
"The Inheritance of Loss", 2008.
An analysis of the theme of national identity in Kiran Desai's "The Inheritance of Loss".
816 words (approx. 3.3 pages), 1 source, MLA, £ 20.95
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Abstract
The paper looks at how Kiran Desai in "The Inheritance of Loss" offers an indictment of a capitalist system that has managed to crush the spirits of a large portion of the world's inhabitants through a relentless attack on their national and racial identity. The paper looks at Desai's portrayals of the characters Biju and the judge and highlights the difficulty in maintaining one's national identity in hostile environments. The paper notes how Desai portrays two very different responses to the degradation that so often befalls the inhabitants of exploited countries.

From the Paper
"The central issue in the judge's life is racial self-hatred, and he spends his bitter years in an awful quest for pale skin and European civilization. Desai does not offer many details about the judge's childhood in India, but it is clear that he arrives in England with a healthy amount of self-respect. It is in England, however, that the judge begins to feel shame at his heritage and darker skin, and it is there that he begins to experience bitterness over the circumstances of his birth. The magnitude of his shame is understandable, and the harrowing scene of his civil service examination encapsulates this well. In it, the judge is forced to recite a poem from memory, but his recitation, riddled as it is by a heavy accent, only manages to amuse his merciless examiners: ""When he looked up, he say they were all chuckling" (Desai 124). "
Essay # 60058 SHOPPING CART DISABLED
The "Wetback", 2005.
This paper looks at Mexican-American history and how the word "wetback" was created.
1,980 words (approx. 7.9 pages), 9 sources, MLA, £ 44.95
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Abstract
This paper explains that to understand the depth of the word "wetback" people must first understand the history of the Mexican-American people: Although their history on American soil goes far back in history to the Spanish conquistadors, the term "wetback" was born as a reference to those illegal Mexican aliens who crossed the Rio Grande around the time of World War I and World War II to find employment in agriculture. The author points out that the reason so many Americans looked down on "wetbacks" was the persistence of this illegal migration, an indictment against the law enforcement agencies of the U.S. and Mexico and, because it was impossible to know the status of every person with Mexican characteristics, soon all Mexicans were labeled "wetbacks". The paper relates that this slur now considered to be politically incorrect because Mexicans are now the fastest growing minority group in the United States of America, a part of the strength of the American economy and whether or not they are in America legally demand respect.

From the Paper
"Society labels phrases 'politically incorrect' as they try to become more sensitive to the feelings and emotions of its members. "Nigger" has changed to African-American, "chink" has changed to Asian-American, retard has changed to mentally disabled, handicap has changed to physically disabled and "wetback" has changed to Hispanic or undocumented immigrant. This may appear to be a move in the right direction but the problem surfaces when people then take these 'politically incorrect' words and throw them around in an attempt to de-humanize people. One may argue that words have no meaning but upon further investigation it is obvious that in fact a word can tell a story or even the history of a people."
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Papers [1-14] of 42 :: [Page 1 of 3]
Go to page : 1 2 3 —>