l Examination Essay component is worth up to 50 points and is composed of seven questions drawn from material presented in your course's textbook #2 by Scarpelli. Choose any five of those seven questions to compose your Final Examination Essay component. Each of your five essays are to be a minimumThe Fina of one page (double spaced) in length (excluding the page number(s) bibliography information), 12 font. Compose each individual essay in MLA format. Submit only one (1) single title page at the beginning of your Final Examination Essay. The title page need only include only your name, professor's name, class subject, and date. At the beginning of each of your essays include the respective question that you are answering, followed by your composed essay (simply cut and paste the question, and then compose your answer to that question). Be sure to do so on each question you are answering. Your Final Examination Essays are to be based exclusively o
Pick any two chapters in the Stulberg-Fuhrman text that more or less address the same subjects. Explain the different perspectives of each author.
Adam N. Stulberg and Matthew Fuhrmann (Eds.): The Nuclear Renaissance and International Security: (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2013). ISBN 978-08047-8417 -7
PART I Drivers and Patterns of the Nuclear Renaissance
Adam N. Stulberg and Mathew Fuhrmann, Introduction: Understanding the Nuclear Renaissance, pp. 1-18
Chp. 1 Bernard Gourley and Adam N. Stulberg, “Correlates of Nuclear Energy: Back to the Future or Back to Basics, pp. 19-29
Chp. 2 Allison MacFarlane, Where, How and Will Nuclear Happen? Nuclear ‘Renaissance Discourses from Buyers and Suppliers”, pp. 50-72
Chp. 3 Mathew Fuhrmann, Nuclear Suppliers and the Renaissance in Nuclear Power, pp. 73-976
Chp. 4 Adam N. Stulberg, Internationalization of the Fuel Cycle and the Nuclear Energy Renaissance: Confronting the Credible Commitment Problem, pp. 97- 123
Chp. 5 Joshu
The prompt is attached, and the assigned textbooks are:
Shanahan, Murray, 2015. The Technological Singularity. Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
Virilio, Paul, 2002. Crepuscular Dawn. New York: Semiotext(e).
Please, always try to keep the plot relevant to the question prompt.
Make sure please, no external sources than the listed above unless it is necessary, and please use enough transition words and conjunctions, no PLAGIARISM at all please.
The semester assignment is an institutional analysis. Institutional analysis is a type of scientific work
examining how institutions – social systems that structure the behavior of individuals and other
systems – function in practice and documenting their effects on communities, individuals, and
society. Such an analysis may include a plan for reducing or eliminating these effects, but this is
not the primary focus.
Freedom and Social Control is a social science general education course. Because this is a general education course, the assignment described in this section
assesses student ability to apply social science principles to the study of social problems.
Thus, for this assignment, the student researcher will work in the tradition of the study of social
problems, which involves is employing a critical perspective to study a contemporary social issue.
These critical perspectives can hail from any number of political standpoints and use methods
derived from one or a combinatio
Scope and Methods in Political Science
Please provide citation for the book (American Democracy in Peril)
Pick any two chapters in the Stulberg-Fuhrman text that more or less address the same subjects. Explain the different perspectives of each author.
Adam N. Stulberg and Matthew Fuhrmann (Eds.): The Nuclear Renaissance and International Security: (Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press, 2013). ISBN 978-08047-8417 -7
PART I Drivers and Patterns of the Nuclear Renaissance
Adam N. Stulberg and Mathew Fuhrmann, Introduction: Understanding the Nuclear Renaissance, pp. 1-18
Chp. 1 Bernard Gourley and Adam N. Stulberg, “Correlates of Nuclear Energy: Back to the Future or Back to Basics, pp. 19-29
Chp. 2 Allison MacFarlane, Where, How and Will Nuclear Happen? Nuclear вЂRenaissance Discourses from Buyers and Suppliers”, pp. 50-72
Chp. 3 Mathew Fuhrmann, Nuclear Suppliers and the Renaissance in Nuclear Power, pp. 73-976
Chp. 4 Adam N. Stulberg, Internationalization of the Fuel Cycle and the Nuclear Energy Renaissance: Confronting the Credible Commitment Problem, pp. 97- 123
Chp