Summary of Sources

  1. Reference book essay (800 words or 2 pages) from a subject-based scholarly reference book

 

Author(s) of Entry:  Christopher McCoy

Title of Entry:  Americas Role in the End of South African Apartheid

Title of Reference Book: Americas Role in the End of South African Apartheid

Author or Editor of Reference Book: NCOBPS 44th Meeting Paper

Volume and Page Numbers:

Publishing Place, Publisher, Date: Southern Methodist University Website

 

 

  1. Reference book essay (800 words or 2 pages) from a subject-based scholarly reference book

 

Author(s) of Entry: Audie Klotz

Title of Entry: Norms in International Relations: The Struggle Against Apartheid

Title of Reference Book: Norms in International Relations: The Struggle Against Apartheid

Author or Editor of Reference Book: Audie Klotz

Volume and Page Numbers:

Publishing Place, Publisher, Date: NY, Cornell University Press, 2018

 

 

  1. Reference book essay (800 words or 2 pages) from a subject-based scholarly reference book

 

Author(s) of Entry: Richard T. Schaefer

Title of Entry: Apartheid, Laws

Title of Reference Book: Encyclopedia of Race, Ethnicity and Society

Author or Editor of Reference Book: Richard T. Schaefer

Volume and Page Numbers: Vol. 1, Pgs. 82-84

Publishing Place, Publisher, Date: Thousand Oaks California, Sage Publications, 2008

 

 

  1. Reference book essay (800 words or 2 pages) from a subject-based scholarly reference book

 

Author(s) of Entry: Siobhan Carter-David

Title of Entry: Anti-Apartheid Movement in Hip Hop

Title of Reference Book: St. James Encyclopedia of Hip Hop Culture

Author or Editor of Reference Book: Thomas Riggs

Volume and Page Numbers: Pgs. 13-16

Publishing Place, Publisher, Date: Farmington Hills, MI, St. James Press, 2018

 

 

 

 

  1. Reference book essay (800 words or 2 pages) from a subject-based scholarly reference book

 

Author(s) of Entry: Carmen Gillespie

Title of Entry: Anti-Apartheid Movements

Title of Reference Book: Critical Companion to Alice Walker: A Literary Reference to Her Life and Work.

Author or Editor of Reference Book: Carmen Gillespie

Volume and Page Numbers: Pgs. 298-299

Publishing Place, Publisher, Date: New York, Facts on File, 2011

 

 

 

  1. Reference book essay (800 words or 2 pages) from a subject-based scholarly reference book

 

Author(s) of Entry: Chris Simkins

Title of Entry:  US Anti-Apartheid Movement Helped Bring Change to South Africa

Title of Reference Book: US Anti-Apartheid Movement Helped Bring Change to South Africa

Author or Editor of Reference Book: Chris Simkins

Volume and Page Numbers:

Publishing Place, Publisher, Date: VOA News April 24th 2014

 

 

  1. Reference book essay (800 words or 2 pages) from a subject-based scholarly reference book

 

Author(s) of Entry:

Title of Entry: Anti-Apartheid and Civil Rights

Title of Reference Book: The Anti-Apartheid Movement in North Texas

Author or Editor of Reference Book: Website Article On Southern Methodist Universities’ page

Volume and Page Numbers:

Publishing Place, Publisher, Date: Southern Methodist University Website

This 3 page reference essay (essentially a summary) has to be on 7 reference book essay sources that were used for the paper that was done in my previous order. The paper was done so well that I wanted to use the same writer for this order too. I will attach the sources so that the writer doesn’t have to go looking for them, however if they want to use some different sources that they believe would be more beneficial to the work I would greatly appreciate that. The writer can utilize the paper they wrote to help them too but technically this assignment was supposed to be done before the paper. Below is the instructions on what to do for this order:
1) Cover what knowledge is most important to set the historical context for, and to provide the vital details of, your topic. Summarize the information into an intelligible essay that establishes the consensus knowledge (to the degree that there is a consensus) and briefly points out any areas that may be in dispute. In short, discuss the causes, courses, and consequences of the event/processes.
2) Do not paraphrase, but write in a reporting-like style in your own words by laying out “the facts” as they are known. Quote, cite, and footnote only where absolutely necessary to acknowledge an interpretative statement. This should be needed only very rarely. For most summary essays, you should not have citations. You are presenting common knowledge.
3) You are not expected to offer critical analysis, except to assess glaring errors, since the expectation is that the reference essays you read are providing essential knowledge in a relatively unbiased fashion.
4) Lastly, based upon the new knowledge you have gained of your topic, close your essay with two or three open-ended “how” questions you wish to explore through further research.