Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on WAR, INEVITABILITY AND CONFLICT RESOLUTION. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 3-page paper discusses if war, and conflict, are inevitable. The thesis is yes, they are, but the best way to work it through is preparation. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_MTwarinvet.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
conflict resolution and negotiation. To do this successfully, the students best bet is to research how wars (and conflicts) are started, then bring in models for achieving resolution through negotiation.
"Conflicts among human beings are as old as life itself," begin the authors of Dispute Resolution: Beyond the Adversarial Model on
the first page of their treatise (p. 3). Not a favorable opening for the concept of alternative dispute resolution, which is what the authors are trying to explore. The authors
then go on to say that resolution through negotiation, rather than violence, can solve even very bitter and painful conflicts (Menkel-Meadow et al, 2004).
But the question that the student is striving to answer here is whether war, or conflict, is inevitable - if humans are naturally geared to fight one another.
This is where a literature search would be a good way to go. We start by defining conflict and trying to dig
down to its root causes. There are many different types of conflict, but the reason why conflict is sparked in the first place is due to different objectives, interpersonal matters,
position and influence and limited resources (Watson, 2008). Philosopher Sun Tzu regarded conflict (in the form of military action) as inevitable and essential to both survival and security of nations
(Watson, 2008). The philosophers belief was that the nation that studied strategy and applied it on a regular basis would survive challenges from hostile competitors (Watson, 2008). Nations that didnt
make a specific study of military matters, however, would become captive to larger and more powerful enemies (Watson, 2008). Little (2006)
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