Writing Homework Help

University of South Florida Economic Development in Brazil Political Science Questions

 

For this paper you will need to research and write an analysis on one topic for one country. This paper will need to be at least 1200 words on the topic you choose. I have provided a list of topics and countries to choose from, please pick one topic and select one country to apply that topic to (i.e. democratic development in Pakistan). Remember, this is an analysis, not just a history – discuss how and why the current situation arose, where it is going, and measures that can be taken for improvement. You are encouraged to suggest a new topic and/or country you are interested in writing on if you discuss it with me first. Remember, your claims must be based in cited evidence. I have provided a list of suggested sources to get you started, but you will need to go beyond on your own. Get started early to make sure you can find enough information on your topic.

A good paper will rely predominantly on your own words, contain an introduction and conclusion that clearly specifies your topic, fully explain all main points, support all claims with cited evidence, and will progress logically from one point to the next. Note that if you use large quotations that are multiple sentences each, you will not score higher than a C. Make sure you cite everything you use in APA format – provide in-paragraph citations in your paper (New York Times, 2015) and provide a reference list at the end of the paper with all of your sources (I would suggest a using an online citation machine to help, like this one (Links to an external site.)). For assistance go to the USF Library Citation Assistance page (Links to an external site.). Papers must be submitted in either Word (.docx) or PDF (.pdf) format. No abstract or cover page required. I will also read any drafts sent to me up to a week before the final paper is due.

TOPIC: Economic Development

COUNTRY: Brazil

SOURCES:The Economist

The New York Times

The Wall Street Journal

The Washington Post

Los Angeles Times

Foreign Affairs

The Christian Science Monitor

NPR

BBC

The Atlantic

Reuters