Live chat

Research paper topics, free example research papers

Free research papers and essays on topics related to: authoritarian rule

  • 6 results found, view research papers on page:
  • 1
  • Cubas Politics - 1,690 words
    Cuba`s Politics While the isle of Cuba was initially discovered on October 27, 1492 during one of Columbus first voyages, it wasnt actually claimed by Spain until the sixteenth century. However, its tumultuous beginnings as a Spanish sugar colony provides an insightful backdrop into the very essence of the countrys political and economic unrest. From its early revolutionary days to the insurrectional challenge of the Marxist-Leninist theories emerged the totalitarian regime under Fidel Castro in present day Cuba. Cuban colonial society was distinguished by the characteristics of colonial societies in general, namely a stratified, inegalitarian class system; a poorly differentiated agricultur ...
    Related: post cold, fidel castro, international community, mood, accelerated
  • Democracy Vs Dictatorship - 1,085 words
    Democracy Vs Dictatorship Democracy vs Dictatorship Essay written by heather Imagine the next time you step into the voting booth your ballot only lists one candidate to choose from. Or perhaps your ballot lists four candidates, but they are all from the Liberal party. Dictatorships are one party political systems that are ruled by one leader or an elite group of people under the principle of authoritarianism. Some feel that dictatorships are the most effective form of government because decisions are made quickly and extreme nationalism benefits the military and economy. These individuals value order, nationalism, and authority. However, these systems often result in violence, repression of ...
    Related: democracy, dictatorship, decision-making process, vladimir lenin, abandoned
  • Freud - 2,304 words
    Freud Sigmund Freud was the first of six children to be born into his middle class, Jewish family. His father was a wool merchant, and was the provider for the family. From the time Freud was a child, he pondered theories in math, science, and philosophy, but in his teens, he took a deep interest in what he later called psychoanalysis. He wanted to discover how a persons mind works, so he began to explore the conscious and unconscious parts of ones psyche. Freuds parents and siblings were directly involved in allowing him to pursue this unexplored area of psychology. He was given his own room so that he could study his books in silence, and was only disturbed when it was time to eat. Freud e ...
    Related: freud, sigmund freud, stuart mill, cultural norms, disagree
  • Oliver Cromwell - 835 words
    Oliver Cromwell Oliver Cromwell, a Puritan fundamentalist and undefeated commander of the Ironsides, forever changed the history of England with, perhaps, what he did not do, rather than what he did do after the success of the insurrection he led against Charles. Though rather unsuccessful as a politician, Cromwell, single-handedly redefining the art of war and military strategy, proved to be one of the greatest military geniuses of all time. Despite the professionally trained forces that often outnumbered him three to one in battle, he struck fear in his opposition and maintained an untarnished record in battle that proved the degree of his skill. Historians traditionally fail to classify h ...
    Related: cromwell, oliver, oliver cromwell, english revolution, military strategy
  • Singapore Media - 1,485 words
    ... abor-intensive products toward higher technological content and worker-skilled products. Potential investors were encouraged to look elsewhere for low-wage, unskilled labor. Aside from producing high value-added exports, the computer and electronics industries played a critical role in the increase of manpower productivity in other technology-intensive industries. The National Computer Board was formed in 1981 to establish Singapore as an international center for computer services; this was mainly to reduce the shortage of skilled computer professionals and to assure high standards of international caliber. (Sim, 1986) By the mid-1980s, the small but growing printing and publishing indus ...
    Related: media, media communication, media relations, new media, singapore
  • The Boozer By Choe Inhon - 1,033 words
    The Boozer by Ch'oe Inhon A Brief Commentary on the Meaning, Societal Relevance, and Use of Subtlety in Ch'oe Inhon's The Boozer "Whenever a shot of that rotgut washed the inside of his everinsatiable mouth he knew just how much more dense his life was going to get" (Ch'oe, 109). Ch'oe Inho's The Boozer offers a dismal glimpse into the life of the lower classes during the period of Korean modernization. Although The Boozer was written in the 1960s, the story does not provide an allegorical account of particular events during the authoritarian rule of Park Chung Hee. Rather, Ch'oe uses the setting of a working class community to convey the suffering of an orphan boy over the loss of his paren ...
    Related: psychological trauma, working class, authoritarian rule, aunt, sentence
  • 6 results found, view research papers on page:
  • 1