Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on President Evo Morales on Bolivia’s Human Rights and Development Issues. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
In four pages this journal style article examines the Bolivian President’s views on his country’s development and commitment to human rights, with poverty, education, and health among the topics addressed. Five sources are listed in the bibliography.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGevomor.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
live in poverty conditions, this President possesses insights into their situation that his predecessors have lacked (Garrigues, 2007). Born in the Andes Highlands in 1959 to a smalltime peasant
farmer Dionisio and his wife Maria, Evo was one of seven children (OShaughnessy, 2006). Like other farm families their village, the impoverished Morales clan endured the hardships of agricultural
life in a challenging region susceptible to dramatic changes in weather, which include frost, hail, and drought (OShaughnessy, 2006). Like their harvesters, the Morales potato crops were in a
constant struggle for survival. The President has vivid memories of chewing on banana and orange peels that were dropped by bus passengers traveling through his village (OShaughnessy, 2006).
Life was so difficult for the family that four of the seven Morales children died before the age of two (OShaughnessy, 2006). Despite enduring great hardship and loss, the
President remains both matter-of-fact and even upbeat about his difficult childhood, observing, "Thats how life is in peasant families... What luck that three of us survived!" (OShaughnessy, 2006, p. 36)
What President Morales took from his childhood were the moral principles his parents instilled in him and his surviving siblings as well as a deep concern for human rights
and a commitment to his countrys economic development (Trujillo, 2007). Having confronted adversity at an early age, the President never harbored any illusions that life in politics would be easy.
His career in the National Congress was cut short by his expulsion in 2002, which he contends served "to deepen his commitment to the people" (Trujillo, 2007, p. 14).
By 2005, his political comeback was complete as the Movimiento al Socialismo (MAS) partys presidential candidate (Panizza & Miorelli, 2009). The charismatic leader marketed his indigenous background to
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