school reports

Yes!!
We DO Have Essays On Your Topic!!
All essays listed below are $11.95
/page with SAME DAY
DELIVERY!!
Bibliography
pages are FREE!!
|
Papers On Presidential Studies (U.S.)
Page 25 of 43
|
|
Presidential Debates 2000: An Analysis of the Gore/Bush Debates
[ send me this paper ]
A 5 page review of the issues touched on in the presidential debates between Al Gore and George W. Bush. Discusses the presentation styles and overall political philosophies of these two men, providing a particular emphasis on their proposals in regard to health care and gun control. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: PPpresDb.wps
Presidential Effectiveness: Leadership Skills and Qualifications or Environment?
[ send me this paper ]
A 12 page contention that presidential effectiveness, and indeed the public perception of that effectiveness, is shaped not only by an individual president’s leadership skills but also by the world environment in which they serve and the policies which are put in place to deal with that environment. Provides examples from the Ronald Reagan and George Bush administration to justify that contention. Bibliography lists 12 sources.
Filename: PPpresLd.wps
Presidential Issues: If I Were President
[ send me this paper ]
A 5 page paper which examines some of the
presidential issues today and presents a hypothetical examination of how, as President of
the United States, an individual would approach the issues from different perspectives.
Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: RApres.rtf
Presidential Pardons: What Should Be Allowed?
[ send me this paper ]
A 5 page paper which discusses
presidential pardons and which ones should, or should not, be allowed. The paper also
discusses recent controversies concerning presidential pardons. Bibliography lists 4
sources.
Filename: RApresprdn.wps
Presidential Persuasion
[ send me this paper ]
This 3 page paper focuses on the use of persuasion by presidents. Neustadt's ideas are discussed. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: SA811prs.rtf
Presidential Power: Enumerated, Inherent and Assumed
[ send me this paper ]
A 5 page discussion of the varied types of power that are available to the President of the
United States. This paper provides a background and examples of each. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: PPpresP2.rtf
Presidential Power: Too Little or Too Much?
[ send me this paper ]
A 15 page outline of the many factors which affect presidential power. The author contends that the President has neither too much power no too little. Instead the power of the Presidential office revolves around the Constitutional framework which created and regulates it as well as other key political personnel and even the environment in which the President serves. Bibliography lists 10 sources.
Filename: PPpresPw.rtf
Presidential Reconstruction/Congressional Plans: 1865-1877
[ send me this paper ]
3 pages in length. Defining the relationships that existed between and among government, politics, democracy and power in the mid-1800s was a task that drew its conclusion upon a very fine line. Indeed, while all four of these entities had something significant to do with one another, at the same time they each possessed their own particular arrangement within the wide and varied scheme of bureaucratic function. The writer discusses the elements that played an integral role in the modification of the presidential reconstruction. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: TLCprez.wps
Presidential Responses To Domestic Economic Conflicts: Impact Upon Popularity
[ send me this paper ]
16 pages in length. The primary objective of any presidency is not to make critical decisions based upon popular opinion, but rather to enact policy based upon the betterment of the nation as a whole, a task that is inherently marred with unpopular public opinion no matter how beneficial it may be. However, there is a fine line between disagreeing with a president's policy and opposing it to such a degree that it changes the foundation upon which that president is popular with his constituency. Two American presidents who experienced this ever-seesawing approval rating did so because of their respective approaches to domestic economic conflict; Hoover suffered the wrath of an angry public, while FDR basked in the glory of an adoring nation. Bibliography lists 15 sources.
Filename: TLCPresResp.rtf
Presidential Slogans and Campaigns
[ send me this paper ]
7 pages. Presidential
campaign slogans began with the election of Andrew Jackson in
1828 and his nickname 'Old Hickory.' While visual media did not
create that campaign at the time, today we find that the media
has more and more to do with the creation of certain slogans and
images within presidential campaigns. Much like advertising,
these slogans help keep an image in the public eye, and by
bombarding us with this image over and over, it is hoped that we
will become impacted by this image to the exclusion of all
others. This type of advertising ploy is used in everything from
products to political campaigns, but the emphasis in this paper
is on the presidential campaigns, particularly those on campaigns
since 1960. A comparison of several campaigns is included in
this interesting outlook, as well as how a campaign slogan can
oftentimes be the tiebreaker in the mind of a voter.
Bibliography lists 7 sources.
Filename: JGAslogn.wps