21st Century Literature

Sunday, April 29, 2018

Position Paper

A position paper is a kind of academic writing in which the student looks into a disputable issue and composes a paper that clarifies his/her stand or perspective on it.
The principal objective of a position paper is to partake in a bigger discussion on the issue by expressing and supporting your supposition or prescribed strategy. The study is required to investigate different papers on the issue, analyze and understand them thoroughly, and detail his/her own argument on the issue. Some true to life examples incorporate moral predicaments including existing or destined to-be-planned organization arrangement and contentions for/or against legislation that may influence business.

The following structure is common to a position paper:

Introduction
• Identification of the issue
• Statement of the position

The body 
• Background data
• Supporting confirmation or facts
• An exchange of the two sides of the issue

A conclusion
• Suggested strategies
• Possible solutions

  • The introduction ought to plainly recognize the issue and express the creator's position. It ought to be composed in a way that gets the reader's attention.
  • The body of the position paper may contain a few sections. Each passage should introduce a thought or principle idea that clears up a segment of the position explanation and is supported by facts or evidence. Evidence can be essential source citations, measurable information, interviews with specialists, and undeniable dates or occasions. It should lead, through inductive thinking, to the primary idea or thought displayed in the passage. The body may start with some foundation data and should consolidate a talk between the two sides of the issue.
  • The conclusion ought to abridge the primary ideas and thoughts and fortify, without rehashing, the presentation or body of the paper. It could incorporate recommended strategies and conceivable arrangements.

References:
  • Maimon, Elaine P., Peritz, Janice H., & Yancey, Kathleen Blake. (2005). A Writer's Resource. New York: McGraw-Hill
  • Tucker, Kerry, & Derelian, Doris, Rouner, Donna. (1997). Building the case: Position papers, backgrounders, fact sheets, and biographical sketches. In Public relations writing: An issue-driven behavioral approach (pp.79- 85). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall.
  • Xavier University Library. (2002). How to Write a Position Paper. Retrieved from https://www.xavier.edu/library/students/documents/position_paper.pdf

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