Killer Thesis: The Case Of Dr. Moynihan

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The progress of my capstone paper is going extremely well. However, it was quite a challenged to develop a Killer Thesis, one that would satisfy the criteria of academia, conversely also express the premise of this scholastic theory. The hypothesis was set, and grounded in empirical evidence. The foundation of this didactic postulate was the only thing left to be constructed.
Moving forward, researching the leading, and creditable professional in the field of psychology, sociology, education, historians, and economist a plethora of substantiated evidence was uncovered, and correlated with this academic writing. For example, one of my sources for this capstone is based on the founding’s and research of Patrick Daniel Moynihan. Dr. Moynihan was known for many things however he was educated scholar, sociologist politician graduating from Tuft University.
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Since many slave owners neither fostered Christian marriage among their slave couples nor hesitated to separate them on the auction block, the slave household often developed a fatherless matrifocal (mother-centered) pattern." Moynihan, Daniel Patrick. 1965. The Negro family: The case for national action. Washington, DC: U.S. Department of Labor, Office of Policy Planning and Research.(n.d. retrieved September 12,

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