reflective essay that explores your reactions, emotions and thoughts about Ishmael.

Assignment: Write a 5-7 page (double spaced) reflective essay that explores your reactions, emotions and thoughts about Ishmael. The assignment is somewhat vague, in order to give you room to explore thoughts and deeply reflect.
Some guidelines to help as you prepare your essay.
I do not want a summary of the book. If you need to summarize some main ideas in the book to make your argument, fine, but the summary should make a very small portion of our essay.
Your essay should contain a thesis in the beginning and the rest of the essay should be written in support of your thesis. This doesn’t mean it has to be a persuasive essay, but it does mean it needs to have a clear focus and organization. The thesis can be whatever you want it to be – as broad or narrow as you wish – but it must exist and your job is to develop and support it.
Your essay should clearly demonstrate that you have read and reflected on the entire book (reading and responding to just one chapter won’t cut it). It should not be a collection of your musings about life. The essay should be grounded in the broad  themes of the book, or particular ideas that you find poignant, and your developed reactions to them.
Your essay can either be personal (e.g. “this book made me feel…”) or more academic
(e.g., “Ishmael explored themes of________ , and when evaluated through the lens of
________ , there are interesting connections to______.”) However, if you write in an academic style, I still want to know how the book affected you. It should not be wholly abstract. So, it is likely impossible to write an “A” paper without some statements in the first-person.
As part of your paper, I want you to apply your chosen themes and/or reflections to a minimum of two ethical challenges we are facing in our current world. How do they help you understand and address these challenges? Use your analysis of the book to develop an ethical stance for these challenges.
I am not going to grade you on your opinion; that’s impossible. You will be graded on a) your understanding of the text (broad themes, ideas, main messages) as you demonstrate it with your writing, b) the appropriateness, depth, and quality of your thesis, c) how well you support your thesis (organization, diction, grammar, eloquence, conciseness), and d) the depth of your analysis. You should be at a level of synthesis – taking the ideas of the book, combining them with your own ideas and knowledge to create novel ideas – and deep reflection, not mere description.
While reading the book, keep notes of the things you find interesting, poignant, mind-blowing, unconvincing, wrong, etc. Reading this book will prompt thoughts. If you are stumped in any way, come talk to me – I am happy to discuss and support your reflection.

GMO food

Why have GMOs been banned in most of Europe, but not in the U.S., and how are the laws regulating GMOs changing?

Each individual must find a minimum of five social science or historical research articles or books on your topic.
There are a variety of databases available through the KSU Library. Sociofile is particularly good for sociology
research.
The four journals generally accepted as the top sociology journals are: 1) American Sociological Review, 2) American
Journal of Sociology, 3) Social Forces and 4) Social Problems. Books can be excellent sources if they are written by
social scientists and not by journalists or ideologues. You should check the author’s identification and confirm that
s/he is a sociologist, political scientist, psychologist, historian or some sort of academically qualified authority before
deciding to select it as one of your sources. I will check on each one to make sure. Two other possibilities are to use
only one chapter from a book, or a chapter from a book that is an edited volume of papers.
An annotated bibliography lists sources and gives a brief summary of each source. This bibliography will not be part
of your final paper. It is a step designed to clarify your thinking about your sources, and I will need to approve your
sources based on your summaries.
You should have a title page with your name, the class, and a title which refers to your topic. The format of the
annotated bibliography is as follows, for each entry:
1) the name of the article or book, in ASA format as used by the ASR, and
2) your summary of the article.
Explain the article or book in your own words in a paragraph. I will provide you with a style guide from the ASR

Political and Social Ethics

Write 4–6 pages in which you assess a law in terms of the social contract theories of Thomas Hobbes and Jean-Jacques Rousseau.
Context
Why do we choose to join together, and what is the best way to organize ourselves for productive social life?
Political philosophers have often approached the issues by asking why and how we join together in the first place. Thinking about what life would be like without any government is one way to see what benefits we expect from its formation. Hobbes, for example, supposed that individual human beings, without the limitations provided by a civil society, would be concerned only with the promotion of their own self-interest, without any respect for other people. Accepting the authority of government, then, is a kind of self-defense, a way of protecting ourselves against the unbridled selfishness of our neighbors.
On this view, each of us voluntarily agrees to accept limitations on our own freedom so that everyone else will be subject to the same limitations. The provisions of this social contract make governmental authority legitimate and obligate each of us to obey. It would not be fair for a person to expect all others to hold up their part of the bargain while make an exception of himself or herself.
The problem with this approach is that it is not always clear when and how we signed up for the program. Sometimes we enter into explicit agreements, of course. As members of the learning community at Capella University, for example, we have all consented to have our interactions governed by the school’s policies. New citizens of a country may make a similar pledge as part of the naturalization process. Most of us, however, simply grow up somewhere, finding ourselves part of the civil society without ever having voluntarily chosen to enter it.
History provides us with several alternative ways of organizing a civil society.
•    Authoritarian governments grant absolute power to a monarch, sovereign, or dictator who exercises political authority by coercive power or divine right.
•    In elitist governments, some group within the whole—distinguished from the rest of the population by aristocratic birth, acquired wealth, or inherent ability—is allowed to make decisions on behalf of the entire society.
•    Democratic societies grant political power to their people, though, in practice, the popular will may be unduly influenced by rhetorical manipulation.
In any form of government, we often find a distinction between the legislative power to establish laws by which people are to be governed and the executive power to enforce them. In modern social democracies, for example, constitutional government often devotes a great deal of attention to the separation and interaction of these powers. As individual citizens, we commonly place our confidence in selected leaders to govern with the interests of the entire society in mind.
But that brings us back to our initial question of the proper relationship between the society as a whole and each individual living in it. Suppose that we acknowledge that the welfare of the population at large must sometimes take precedence over private concerns, and that it is the proper function of the government to make sure that selfish individuals do not interfere with the public good. Even so, each of us would like to be free to pursue our own plans and ambitions within the framework of society as a whole.
Agreeing to participate in the civil society does not require that we give up all of our private interests. Mill (1859, pp. 91–92) and Rawls (1971, pp. 136–143) both argue that a well-organized society should preserve as much individual liberty as is compatible with the continued existence of the state. Justice requires that each of us be permitted to pursue our lives freely, unless doing so interferes with the freedom of our fellow citizens. This means that we can think and say whatever we want and do anything that will not harm someone else.
References
Mill, J. S. (1859). On liberty. London, GBR: Longman.
Rawls, J. (1971). A theory of justice. Boston, MA: Harvard University Press.
Assessment Instructions
Many states require that drivers wear seat belts while operating their motor vehicles. This is not like forbidding the use of cell phones or intoxicants, which might impair the driver and endanger other people on the roads. The seat belt law imposes a governmental regulation that can, at most, be held to protect only the individual citizen whose behavior is being restricted. Why should the government be able to tell an individual what to do in the privacy of his or her own car?
Write a paper assessing the seat belt law, in terms of the social contract theories of Thomas Hobbes and Jean-Jacques Rousseau. Support your assessment with research on their social contract theories. You may begin your research with suggested Resources, but you are also expected to conduct your own independent research into the scholarly and professional resources of the field.
Consider the following in your paper:
•    Should the government provide security by overcoming the selfish desires of the individual citizen, or should citizens cooperate voluntarily in service of the general welfare of all?
•    What justifies the imposition of governmental authority on individual citizens?
•    Are individuals always obligated to obey the dictates of their government?
•    Which elements of the traditional theories are relevant to this case?
•    Is it unethical for individual citizens to ignore this governmental requirement?
•    You may also wish to apply other conceptions of the basis for social and political order.
Additional Requirements
•    Written communication: Written communication should be free of errors that detract from the overall message.
•    APA formatting: Include a title page and a references page, formatted according to APA (6th edition) style and formatting.
•    References: A typical paper will include support from a minimum of 3–5 recent references.
•    Length: A typical paper will be 4–6 typed, double-spaced pages in length.
•    Font and font size: Times New Roman, 12-point.
Grading will be scored on the following:
Justifies the ethical basis for the relation of individuals to their government.
Explains the social contract theories of Hobbes and Rousseau.
Assesses the advantages and disadvantages of differing approaches to political theory, supporting the assessment with research.
Applies traditional social contract theories to contemporary political life, with the support of detailed research.
Communicates in a manner that is scholarly, professional, and consistent with expectations for members of professional communities, with written communication that is free of errors that detract from the overall message.

The transition of Taiwan New Cinema

What is the significance of the Taiwan New Cinema now, about 30 years afterward? In what ways does the Taiwan New Cinema still shape present day Taiwan cinema? Is it a burden for present day filmmakers, film audiences, and film scholars?
I attach the file for references.
Please make references from “Kuei-fen Chiu, Ming-yeh T. Rawnsley, and Gary Rawnsley eds., Taiwan Cinema: International Reception and Social Change (Routledge 2017).”

Territorial Expansion and Slavery

Review the Territorial Expansion and Slavery timeline.
Write a 100- to 150-word response to each of the following questions:
-Compare the number of free and slave-holding states and territories throughout the timeline. How did Congress deal with the issue of slavery as new states were admitted and new territories acquired? How did these actions affect the tensions between the North and the South?
-What were some of the arguments centered on slavery and territorial expansion? How did the Compromise of 1850 fail to solve them?
-Identify at least three key events that took place in the 1850’s. How did each of the events lead the country toward civil war?
Cite your sources consistent with APA guidelines.

book review- Sing You Home By Jodi Picoult

Name of Book: Sing You Home By Jodi Picoult
The paper must be a minimum of three pages of text and use APA format. Use citations for any references used for the paper. Goal: Ability to demonstrate a high level of ethical analysis and understanding of ethical dilemmas.
I. Introduction
A. 1-2 sentences to establish the book read and one or two sentences summarizing
Your synthesis of the focus and purpose of the book related to Ethics.
Identify the Content and focus of the paper.
II. Application of concepts- be specific and in depth
Using our text, class discussions, outside literature, etc. apply a number of concepts and materials that are addressed throughout the course.
Be specific and use examples from the book read and the textbook, provide citations as needed.
III State clearly the relationship between the concepts and your analysis of the book as it relates to ethics.
Use outside professional literature to support your application of theories, concepts and decision-making models relating to your analysis.
IV. Summary
Explore how this book influenced your learning in this class? Would you
Recommend other students to use this book in Ethics? Why or why not?
C. Consider how you will use this ability to synthesize professional ethical practice in your future work as a human service professional.
D. Other concluding thoughts.