
These papers are available.
Same day delivery! Only $11.95
/page + FREE Bibliography!!!
FREE Excerpts available on request! Select any paper below!
|
Papers On More Historical Figures & Their Works
Page 18 of 74
|
|
A. Phillip Randolph
[ send me this paper ]
A 6 page research paper that looks at the career of this African American leader. Asa Philip Randolph (1889-1979) was the most significant civil rights leader to emerge from the labor movement (Stein, 1991). His name is not as well-known as that of Martin Luther King, however, Randolph was a principal motivator of his generation and a pioneer in obtaining rights for black Americans. His career as a political activist begins early in the twentieth century, decades before the civil rights movement and examination of his work suggests that his early successes in gaining rights for black Americans laid the necessary groundwork upon which 1960s civil rights movement was built. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: khapraal.rtf
Achebe’s “Things Fall Apart” and “The Interesting Narrative” by Olaudah Equiano
[ send me this paper ]
A 6 page paper which examines the conditions of Africans who come in contact with
Europeans as seen from the 19th century writing of Olaudah Equiano in his narrative, and
Achebe’s “Things Fall Apart” which addresses the turn of the 20th century. No additional
sources cited.
Filename: RAachb2.rtf
Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. / 1960-1967
[ send me this paper ]
A 12 page overview of Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. during his years as Chairman of the House Committee on Education and Labor. The writer provides an historical view of his career in these years with emphasis on the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 in terms of his leadership style, allies, and enemies. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: Acpowell.wps
Africa and Profit From Slave Trade
[ send me this paper ]
A 4 page research paper that discusses whether or not the slave trade was economically beneficial for Africa. The Atlantic slave trade was ongoing for over three hundred and fifty years, profoundly affected the histories of four continents and “constituted history’s largest forced migration,” as over 12 million Africans were transported to various locations in Europe and the Americas (Clark 273). Some historians have argued that while the slave trade was morally wrong, it was economically beneficial to Africa. This examination of literature explores and analyses the validity of this assertion. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
Filename: khafpro.rtf
Can't find what you're looking
for?
Order customized
assistance instead!


© 2008
The Paper Store Enterprises,
Inc. All graphics on this site were either created or licensed by
TPS, Inc. All reports delivered via AcademicIntegrity.Com remain the
intellectual property of the corporation and its contracted research
writers. No portion of our work may be reprinted or presented in a
student's own report without proper attribution to TPS as a source.
|