Political Science
Assignment Help
Theory to Policy
Expert support for international relations essays, public policy memos, comparative politics research, and political theory analysis. Writers who apply the correct theoretical frameworks — not surface-level commentary.
Power, Institutions, and Evidence
Political science is the systematic study of governance, political behaviour, and institutional power using both empirical and normative methods. It is not an opinion discipline — successful political science writing requires the application of established theoretical frameworks to observable political phenomena, supported by scholarly evidence and structured argumentation.
The discipline divides into five primary sub-fields: international relations, comparative politics, political theory, public administration, and political economy. Each demands a different analytical approach and a different writing style. A policy memo written for a public administration course looks nothing like a realist analysis of state behaviour in an international relations seminar — and instructors grade accordingly.
According to the American Political Science Association (APSA), political science writing requires students to construct thesis-driven arguments supported by evidence, apply relevant theoretical frameworks, engage with counter-arguments, and adhere to discipline-specific citation conventions. These criteria go significantly beyond general academic writing competencies.
Our service covers the full spectrum of political science writing. We apply the correct framework — whether Realism for an IR paper, the comparative method for a cross-national study, or Rawlsian theory for a political philosophy essay — and back every argument with peer-reviewed scholarly sources from major political science journals and databases.
International Relations Theories
Every international relations assignment requires the application of a specific theoretical lens. Our writers select and apply the framework that best explains the political phenomena being analysed — and justify that selection as part of the argument.
Classical Realism
States are the primary actors in an anarchic international system. National interest and the pursuit of power drive state behaviour. Human nature — self-interested and power-seeking — is the root cause of international conflict. Used to analyse war, great-power competition, and balance-of-power dynamics.
Structural Realism (Neorealism)
International conflict derives from the structure of the international system — specifically its anarchic character — rather than from human nature. States balance power to ensure survival. Applied to alliance formation, security dilemmas, and hegemonic transitions. Explains great-power rivalry without reference to individual leaders’ intentions.
Liberal Internationalism
Democratic institutions, economic interdependence, and international organisations constrain conflict and promote cooperation. Democratic peace theory predicts that democracies rarely go to war with each other. Used to analyse multilateral institutions (UN, WTO, EU), trade policy, and conflict resolution mechanisms.
Constructivism
International politics is shaped by shared ideas, norms, and identities — not just material power. State interests and identities are not fixed but constructed through social interaction. Explains norm diffusion, identity politics in foreign policy, and the emergence of international human rights regimes. Particularly useful for non-Western IR analysis.
Critical Theory & Postcolonialism
Challenges the dominant IR frameworks as products of Western, state-centric perspectives. Examines how power, inequality, and historical colonialism shape contemporary international relations. Applied to development politics, Global South foreign policy, and the critique of international institutions as tools of hegemonic power.
Feminist IR Theory
Examines how gender shapes international relations, security studies, and foreign policy. Critiques the masculine assumptions embedded in realist conceptions of power and security. Applied to analysis of women in conflict, gendered impacts of economic sanctions, and the role of gender in peacebuilding and post-conflict reconstruction.
Political Science Sub-Fields We Cover
Our writers hold graduate qualifications across political science’s major sub-fields. Each area requires distinct methodologies, source types, and writing conventions — our matching process ensures the right writer for your specific assignment.
International Relations
State behaviour, foreign policy analysis, conflict and cooperation, international organisations, diplomacy, security studies, and global governance. We apply established IR theories (Realism, Liberalism, Constructivism, Critical Theory) to contemporary and historical case studies. Sources drawn from International Security, International Organization, Foreign Affairs, and World Politics.
Comparative Politics
Systematic comparison of political systems, regimes, parties, electoral systems, legislatures, and institutions across countries. We use the most similar systems design, most different systems design, and process tracing methods to draw valid cross-national inferences. Strong quantitative and qualitative comparative methodology applied throughout.
Political Theory & Philosophy
Normative analysis of justice, legitimacy, authority, and political obligation. Engages with canonical texts from Plato, Aristotle, Hobbes, Locke, Rousseau, Mill, Marx, Rawls, and Nozick. We interpret theoretical arguments precisely — no misattribution of positions — and connect historical texts to contemporary political problems with appropriate scholarly care.
Public Policy & Administration
Policy process analysis, bureaucratic organisation, regulatory design, public budgeting, program evaluation, and implementation studies. We produce policy memos, briefing papers, policy analysis reports, and program evaluation frameworks. Writing is calibrated to the decision-maker audience — direct, evidence-based, and recommendation-oriented.
Political Economy
The interaction between political institutions and economic outcomes — trade policy, international financial regulation, development economics, fiscal policy, income distribution, and the political determinants of growth. We integrate both political science and economics literatures and apply quantitative evidence to political economy arguments.
American Politics
US constitutional structure, Congressional behaviour, presidential power, the federal judiciary, political parties, interest groups, voting behaviour, and electoral politics. We analyse American political institutions with reference to the constitutional framework and the behavioural and rational-choice traditions that dominate American politics scholarship.
Political Science Assignment Types
Every genre of political science writing has distinct structural requirements, source conventions, and grading criteria. We produce the correct format for each assignment type — not a generic essay regardless of what the brief asks for.
Research Papers
Long-form academic arguments supported by peer-reviewed scholarly literature. We construct a debatable thesis, develop the argument across structured body sections, engage with counter-arguments, and produce a properly formatted bibliography. Calibrated to undergraduate, MA, and doctoral rubric standards.
Policy Memos
Concise, professionally structured documents addressed to a specific decision-maker. We apply the standard government memo format: problem definition, background, policy options (with criteria-based evaluation), and a specific recommendation with implementation notes. No hedging — policy memos require a clear position.
Op-Eds & Policy Briefs
Persuasive public-facing writing on political and policy issues. Op-eds are written in an accessible register aimed at a general audience while maintaining analytical rigour. Policy briefs are formatted for think-tank or legislative staff audiences — structured, evidence-heavy, and recommendation-oriented without academic jargon.
Literature Reviews
Systematic analysis and synthesis of the scholarly debate on a political science topic. We identify major schools of thought, trace how the debate has evolved, flag methodological weaknesses in existing studies, and identify gaps your research could address. Draws exclusively from peer-reviewed political science journals.
Case Studies
In-depth analysis of a single country, event, regime, or institution using the comparative method. We apply process tracing, congruence analysis, or within-case comparison to extract generalizable theoretical insights from particular cases. Case studies require both deep factual knowledge and methodological precision — we provide both.
Book Reviews & Critiques
Critical evaluation of political science monographs or edited volumes. We summarise the central argument accurately, assess the quality of evidence and methodology, situate the work within the broader scholarly conversation, and evaluate its contribution to the field. We write reviews that engage substantively rather than merely summarising content.
Discussion Posts & Responses
Substantive contributions to online seminar discussions that demonstrate theoretical engagement rather than personal opinion. We apply course framework and scholarly sources to address the discussion prompt, then write peer responses that advance the conversation with new evidence or analytical challenge rather than agreement.
Quantitative Analysis Papers
Data-driven political science papers using regression analysis, content analysis, survey data, or electoral statistics. We interpret quantitative findings within a political science theoretical framework, produce tables and figures where required, and write up results sections that connect statistical findings to the research question.
Dissertations & Theses
Full-length MA and PhD dissertation support — from research design and literature review through to empirical chapters and conclusion. We produce individual chapters or complete dissertations in political science, international relations, public policy, and public administration. Research proposals and outlines available separately.
The Policy Memo: Structure and Standards
The policy memo is one of the most frequently assigned — and most frequently mishandled — formats in political science and public policy programmes. Students accustomed to writing academic essays often produce memo-length essays instead of decision-facing policy documents. The two are fundamentally different genres.
A properly structured policy memo is addressed to a specific decision-maker (e.g., “To: Secretary of State”), identifies a concrete political problem with defined scope, evaluates two to four policy options against explicit evaluative criteria (feasibility, cost, political viability, effectiveness), and concludes with a specific, actionable recommendation — not a balanced summary of options.
According to guidance from the Cambridge University Press journal PS: Political Science & Politics, effective policy memo instruction requires students to understand that the memo’s purpose is to move decision-makers toward action — making brevity, clarity, and a decisive recommendation the defining features of the document rather than exhaustive coverage of the academic literature.
We produce memos that follow this standard: concise executive summary, sharply defined problem, criteria-grounded options analysis, and a recommendation the instructor can verify as policy-defensible. We do not produce academic essays formatted with a memo header — we produce actual policy memos.
Constructing a Political Science Argument
Political science instructors grade on the quality of the argument — not the quantity of information. A strong political science paper has a debatable thesis, structured evidence, and engages explicitly with counter-arguments.
Thesis Statement — Debatable and Specific
A political science thesis must be debatable — a claim that a reasonable person could dispute with evidence. “The United States has engaged in foreign policy” is not a thesis. “US foreign policy in the post-Cold War era has been primarily driven by economic interest rather than democratic promotion, as evidenced by intervention patterns in resource-rich authoritarian states” is a thesis. We construct theses that make a specific, falsifiable claim about political phenomena.
Framework Selection and Justification
The theoretical framework is not decorative — it determines which evidence is relevant and how it should be interpreted. We select the framework that best explains the phenomena being analysed and justify that selection explicitly in the paper. Applying Realism to analyse NATO enlargement is a defensible choice; applying it without justification while ignoring Constructivist alternatives leaves the paper methodologically vulnerable.
Evidence Integration — Primary and Secondary
Political science papers require both scholarly secondary sources (peer-reviewed journal articles, academic monographs) and, where appropriate, primary sources (government documents, treaties, speeches, official statistics, legislative records, court decisions). We distinguish between evidence types and deploy them correctly — government statistics as empirical evidence, scholarly articles as interpretive frameworks, primary documents as direct political artefacts.
Counter-Argument Engagement
A political science paper that does not acknowledge the strongest counter-arguments to its thesis is intellectually weak — instructors at MA and doctoral level expect you to demonstrate that you have engaged with the opposition. We identify the strongest objections to the thesis, present them fairly, and then rebut them with evidence. This dialectical structure is what distinguishes analysis from advocacy.
Citation and Source Quality
Political science journals that carry academic weight include American Political Science Review, International Organization, Comparative Political Studies, World Politics, Journal of Democracy, and International Security. We prioritise these and equivalent peer-reviewed outlets over news sources, NGO reports, or Wikipedia for scholarly claims. We use primary sources — treaties, legislation, official government data, UN resolutions — for factual and legal claims about political events.
How to Order Political Science Help
Four steps from your assignment brief to a completed, submission-ready paper with a plagiarism report.
Upload Your Brief
Share your assignment prompt, rubric, required readings, citation style, and deadline. The more specific your instructions, the more precisely calibrated the final paper.
Writer Matching
We match you with a writer who holds a graduate qualification in your specific sub-field — IR, comparative politics, political theory, public policy, or American politics.
Research & Writing
Your writer selects the appropriate theoretical framework, sources peer-reviewed scholarly literature, and drafts a rigorous, thesis-driven argument in your required citation style.
Delivery & Review
Receive your completed paper with a free Turnitin originality report. Unlimited revisions within 14 days. Contact support at any stage for updates.
Why Political Science Students Use Smart Academic Writing
We do not produce generic social science essays and relabel them as political science. Every order is matched to a writer with subject-specific qualifications.
PhD-Qualified Writers
Writers hold doctoral or master’s degrees in political science, international relations, public policy, or public administration from accredited universities.
Correct Citation Styles
Chicago Author-Date, Chicago Notes-Bibliography, APA 7, MLA 9th, and Turabian — applied accurately throughout, including footnotes, reference lists, and bibliography formatting.
Plagiarism-Free
Every paper is written from scratch. A free Turnitin originality report is included with every order. No content is reused between assignments.
24/7 Support
Round-the-clock support for order placement, writer communication, and revision requests. Rush delivery from 12 hours for urgent deadlines.
Transparent Pricing
Pricing is based on academic level, page count, and deadline. No hidden fees. Use the quote calculator to estimate your order cost before committing.
Political Science Student Toolkit
Resources built for political science students — covering theoretical framework application, policy memo structuring, citation formatting, and argument construction.
IR Theory Selection Guide
A decision framework for selecting the correct international relations theory for your assignment topic — Realism, Liberalism, Constructivism, Critical Theory — with worked examples showing how each framework analyses the same event differently.
Free DownloadPolicy Memo Template
A fully structured policy memo template with instructions for each section — header block, executive summary, problem definition, policy options table, recommendation, and implementation notes. Calibrated to the standard used in MPA and public policy programmes.
Free TemplateChicago & APA Citation Guide
A one-page reference card covering the citation formats most commonly required in political science — Chicago Author-Date, Chicago Notes-Bibliography, APA 7 — with examples for journal articles, books, government documents, and online primary sources.
Free GuideComparative Methods Overview
An explanation of the most similar systems design, most different systems design, and process tracing — the three comparative methods most commonly required in comparative politics assignments — with worked examples and case selection guidance.
Free GuidePolitical Theory Thinkers Map
A visual reference mapping canonical political theorists (Hobbes through Rawls) to their core arguments, the historical context of their writing, and the contemporary political debates their work is most commonly applied to in modern political science courses.
Free DownloadThesis Construction Worksheet
A worksheet for building a debatable political science thesis — walking through topic narrowing, claim specification, theoretical grounding, and testability. Includes before/after examples showing the transformation from a vague topic statement to a defensible analytical thesis.
Free DownloadPolitical Science Specialists
Our writers hold graduate qualifications in political science’s major sub-fields. Each specialist is matched to assignments based on their specific area of expertise — not assigned generically.
Eric holds an MA in History and International Relations and specialises in diplomatic history, Cold War geopolitics, and contemporary foreign policy analysis. He applies Realist and Constructivist frameworks to IR assignments, with particular strength in US foreign policy, NATO dynamics, and great-power competition. His work draws from APSR, International Security, and Foreign Affairs.
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Dr. Njeri holds a PhD in Sociology with a specialisation in political philosophy and ideology. He interprets canonical political texts with precision — Rawls, Nozick, Habermas, Marx — and connects classical theoretical arguments to contemporary political problems. He is particularly strong on distributive justice, democratic theory, and postcolonial political thought. Ideal for graduate-level theory assignments.
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Zacchaeus holds an M.Ed with a focus on political communication and the role of media in shaping public opinion and policy outcomes. He analyses political messaging, agenda-setting, framing effects, and voter behaviour through a communications lens. His assignments cover political media studies, public opinion research, and the intersection of digital media and electoral politics.
View Author ProfileDr. Karimi holds a PhD in Economics and specialises in political economy — specifically the political determinants of economic policy, trade governance, development finance, and income distribution. He integrates quantitative economic evidence with political science theory to produce analytically rigorous political economy papers. Strong background in IMF conditionality, World Bank development policy, and fiscal politics.
View Author ProfileAmelia holds an MPA and specialises in public policy analysis, bureaucratic organisation, regulatory design, and program evaluation. She produces policy memos, briefing papers, and policy analysis reports formatted to the professional standard expected in MPA courses. She is particularly strong on health policy, environmental regulation, and social welfare policy analysis.
View Author ProfileJames holds an MA in Comparative Politics and specialises in democratisation, electoral system design, authoritarianism, and African political systems. He applies comparative methods — most similar systems design, process tracing, and cross-national statistical analysis — to assignments requiring rigorous cross-country comparison. Particularly strong on sub-Saharan Africa, Latin American democratisation, and comparative electoral institutions.
View Author ProfilePolitical Science Student Reviews
“Eric’s analysis of Cold War proxy conflicts was exactly what my IR seminar required. He applied Realism to explain Soviet and American strategic decisions without collapsing the argument into an oversimplified good-versus-evil narrative. Received an A on my midterm.”
“I had no idea how to format a policy memo — I kept writing academic essays with a memo header. Amelia produced a properly structured document with a clear executive summary, options table, and a specific recommendation. My professor marked the structure as exemplary.”
“Dr. Njeri’s interpretation of Rawls’s difference principle for my political theory paper was precise and clearly grounded in the primary text. He did not misattribute positions or oversimplify — which is exactly what my professor was watching for. Strong work at graduate level.”
“James handled my comparative politics paper on democratisation in sub-Saharan Africa. He used the most similar systems design properly — not just two countries in the same region selected without methodological justification. The methodology section alone earned full marks.”
Frequently Asked Questions
Specific answers for political science students — covering assignment formats, theoretical frameworks, citation styles, and turnaround times.
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Expert political science support that applies the correct theoretical framework, uses peer-reviewed scholarly sources, and produces thesis-driven arguments — not surface-level commentary.
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