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Your term project is an integrative summary of seven short papers. Each paper that
Your term project is an integrative summary of seven short papers.
Each
paper that you read must be at least three pages long. For example,
if you read a newspaper article that in only 2 pages long, it will not
count as one of your papers.
For each paper that you read, you must summarize the paper in approximately one page, but usually about 3/4 page.
Each paper that you read must be preceded by a bibliographical citation.
After
summarizing all the papers, you must write an Integrative Summary that
ties all the papers together and demonstrate how they address a narrow
topic. For example, How Pharmacies in England resisted resisted laws to
limit the free distribution of addictive opium during the 19th Century.
These
papers may be from the academic literature or current news on drug
controls, the drug war, history of illicit or psychoactive drugs or drug
policies from anywhere in the world. You
may select articles from journal articles or working papers on Drug
Policies, Economic Analysis, Economic Historical Analysis, Medical
History, Scientific Analysis, International Diplomacy, and Social and
Philosophical Analysis.
Finally,
the documents you cite must include research papers, magazine articles,
newspaper article or government policy documents published during the
last 10 years.
Your
bibliography topic must be narrow and specific. You cannot select
papers that address the War on Drugs in general. An example of an
acceptable topic could be “The Medellin Cartel: It’s Rise and Fall” or
Comparing the Methods of Pablo Escobar and Other Drug Gangs or How the
Dutch Profited from the Trade in Opium and Why and When they Ceased to
Trade in Opium
The bibliographical selection may address topics from the examples listed below or other topics that you may select:
Comparative international policies
Historical analysis of policies in different countries
Socio-Economic analysis of drug policies
Social and Psychological Issues of Drug Use and Policies
The Politics and Economics the War on Drugs
International Drug Cartels and their Activities / Violence and Corruption
European colonialism and the drug trade in history
Foreign Trade and the History of Drugs (Opium and Cocaine)
