Here is the synopsis of our sample research paper on Whistleblowing in the Style of Letter from Birmingham Jail
. Have the paper e-mailed to you 24/7/365.
Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 6 page paper takes the form of a letter in the style of the letter Dr. Martin Luther King wrote from the Birmingham Jail. This letter discusses why an employee is going to become a "whistleblower."
Page Count:
6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_HVWhiBlo.rtf
Buy This Term Paper »
 
Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
they are committing themselves to a very difficult course of action. This paper takes the form of a letter from an employee to a manager, informing him that the employee
is going to make the managers actions public. The employee is risking her job to do so, but feels she must. The letter uses Dr. Martin Luther Kings "Letter from
the Birmingham Jail" as a model for its construction. The Letter Because this takes the form of a letter, the student will write of some issue of importance to them,
using first person. It might read like this: Dear Mr. Smith, I am writing because circumstances have brought information to my attention that I find deeply troubling. I believe
this information is serious and demands attention and explanation. Because our relationship has always been professional and one of mutual respect, I felt that I owed it to you to
explain the facts of the matter before proceeding further. In the past three weeks, I have read two factual reports detailing the cost of our research, development and manufacturing of
the new arthritis drug, currently named Drug X. I have also seen a signed statement by you indicating that pricing of this new drug is to start at twice the
level currently being charged for similar drugs on the market. The markup on this new drug is therefore over 6000%. That is, the active ingredients in 100 tables of Drug
X cost $.71, but you are going to sell a 100-tablet bottle for $215.17, a markup of 30,306%. Finally, I have also seen a government study done on behalf of
the Social Security Administration that indicates a growing number of seniors cannot afford their prescription drugs, and are either taking smaller doses or skipping the medications entirely. In short, an
...