Is it conceptual the same between Policing and Police? Is Policing important to a society, why or why not?

Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)Section 1: Introduction (about 350 words)
Define the main concept
What is the issue?
A brief background of the issue
Scope and aim
Structure/Flow of the Essay

Section 2: Literature review and research finding (about 700 words)
Using some themes to present at least 3 peer-reviewed scholarly articles to summarize in a coherent way about
(a) the theoretical perspective(s),
(b) the law
(c) the main conclusions of the references, and
(d) the research finding
How do you make use of the literature reviewed/research finding in the following sections?

Section 3: Critical analysis of the issue (about 700 words)
Analyze and compare with positive/negative arguments of the issue
Section 4: Conclusion (about 250 words)
What did you do?
Your final conclusion and any recommendation!
================================
References
How to cite:
https://www.uwl.ac.uk/library/finding-and-using-information/referencing
Reference everything that is not common knowledge or your own analysis. Make sure everything is referenced.
E.g.Harvard –
Neville, C 2010, The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism, Open University Press, New York.
E.g. APA –
Neville, C.(2010). The complete guide to referencing and avoiding plagiarism. New York: Open University Press.
In-text reference
Harvard …..(Neville 2010) or Neville (2010, p. 25) stated that…..
APA …………. Neville (2010) or Neville (2010:25) stated that …
=========================================
How to write essay guidance

This is academic writing so that you will write in third person.

Do not use: I, we, you, etc., in your text. Instead, write: this research, society, one could argue, it has been argued, as highlighted by…, research conducted by…, and so on.

Do not use slang or abbreviations, such as: hasn’t, doesn’t, wasn’t, etc. Write the words in full: has not, does not, was not.

Use time to proofread your essay before submitting it. Look carefully at your grammar, your writing style and remove repetitions.

Make sure there is a clear line from your research questions to your conclusion.

Use subheadings to guide the reader.
===================================
You should use

Academic sources: books, peer-reviewed articles.

Official reports (governments or governmental bodies) or reports from well-known academic organisations, such as HKU Scholar Hub.

International reports from the UN and EU etc.
News outlets (be critical about these sources and check that the arguments and the news stories are reliable. E.g. BBC News, The Guardian, The Independent, The New York Financial Times, The Wall Street Journal, Washington Post etc.)

Your own sources (must assess its academic integrity and quote the source)

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