Solutions for Climate Refugees to the United States/ Research Paper for College Writing 2 Class

Solutions for Climate Refugees to the United States/ Research Paper for College Writing 2 Class

I already wrote the First Part of this research paper which was about the causes and effects of the climate change. I talked about people moving from Central America to US. For this paper I need to find solutions for the Climate Refugees. I want the solutions to be about “legal protection gap” for climate change. This paper needs to talk about framework for climate refugees. MLA Format and writer can use images/figures through out the essay. I shared the First Part of the essay. it has to be the solution for what I wrote in the First Part. I mainly focus on Climate Refugees from the Central America so the solution should be for the USA’s policies and International Policies for them.

Here is the Prompt for this College Writing 2 Essay:

Part 2 of the “Long Writing 2 Essay.” Students will argue for and defend a proposed solution or next steps to formulating a solution to the problem described in the HCP. Students must use credible sources to demonstrate support for the solution and develop feasible mitigation or adaptation strategies for implementation. 9-10 pages. Minimum 6 new sources + 3 new multimodal sources.

Like the HCP, the main assignment here is a multi-modal composition that uses various rhetorical positions and different types of evidence to make arguments. This one, however, is a bit different from the first in that over the course of these next few weeks, as you research and evaluate various sources, and as you draft, craft and organize your thoughts and evidence, you will at some point have to make a decision to become an advocate for solutions to your central problem in at least one of the following three ways: 1) you might advocate one or more specific solutions to the significant and current political/social/cultural problem that sits at the center of your focus; 2) you might locate the next steps to potentially solving your project’s central problem; or, 3) you might argue for why the current solutions do not work and leave your readers with questions about possible next steps. In other words, your arguments for advocating solutions in combination with the analytical reasons you provide for why you have chosen to focus on particular solutions will after weeks and weeks of diligent engagement become a richly-textured thesis statement, one that deepens your articulation of the problem at hand and argues for convincing for ways to move forward.

When we think of the act of advocating and when we imagine a person or an organization who is an advocate for a cause, we think of strongly held opinions delivered with intensity from a rhetorical position that appears unshakable, deeply confident in the ethical rightness of its arguments and the accuracy of its knowledge. If we look at advocacy in such ways, we can understand why it takes time to become a convincing advocate, and that advocacy, even when it is delivered in the form of a thesis-driven composition, is a form of argumentation that can be quite different from the balanced arguments we often think of as academic writing even if it is as rigorous in its presentation of evidence.

This is not to say that academic writers are not advocates. They are, and over the course of this project, you will become such an advocate—one who uses academic research and methods to deliver persuasive arguments convincingly to a public of one’s peers. Academic writers in many disciplines often write with the purpose of advocating for solutions to political/social/cultural/environmental problems. When they do so, they are expected to consider and present positions that run against theirs in various ways – call them counter arguments – in order to meet the expectations of their academic audience. They must demonstrate their mastery of established arguments and knowledge in areas of discourse and recognize the legitimacy of other perspectives, even if the author seeks ultimately to dismiss them.

In the realm of public advocacy, arguments and persuasion can look, feel, and sound quite different. Public advocates deliver strong and impassioned arguments by undermining counter arguments. They do so by choice and with knowledge about the various perspectives and pieces of evidence that may potentially undermine their case. When putting forth arguments in academic or public settings, the most convincing advocates do not simply put forward solutions without first comprehending the informed debates in which these solutions are situated. Rather, successful advocates draw from a deep well of knowledge when carefully selecting the evidence and rhetorical appeals that will make their case about how to address the profound social problems they put before their audiences.

This assignment challenges you to become that strong advocate, one who delivers convincing solutions to a current and pressing political/social/cultural problem. You cannot, in all likelihood, be this advocate at the beginning of the project. You will need to spend time researching and evaluating sources; you will need to explore various arguments and perspectives as you write proposals and drafts. At some point, however, after deepening your knowledge and maybe even after writing a full draft or two, you will need to choose a position to advocate.

 

 

Solution Preview

Solutions for Climate Refugees to the United States

Introduction

            Climate change has been noted to adversely changing the environment and thus having a direct impact to the lives of people affecting how they are living. In the recent years great attention has been placed on people who have had to move from their home country to other countries such as the United States majorly because they have been displaced due to climate change (Baker, 5). Persons who have been displaced by climate change and environmental factors are commonly known as Environmentally Displaced Persons (EDPs). This is a problem that readily outlines how climate change can be a calamity to human beings and the minimal impact that humans can have to reverse such conditions.

The UNHCR has out rightly noted that climate change is as deadly an impact of people getting displaced as other causes such as war. The UNHCR has tried working with various climate associated agencies in a quest to find solutions, 

(3,344 words)

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