affirmative action

NOUN
  1. a policy designed to redress past discrimination against women and minority groups through measures to improve their economic and educational opportunities
    affirmative action has been extremely controversial and was challenged in 1978 in the Bakke decision
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How To Use affirmative action In A Sentence

  • He claimed that the school district stepped over the line with its affirmative action plan and that race was improperly used to discriminate against the white teacher.
  • Since independence the term indigenous, widely used in an affirmative action campaign, has applied almost exclusively to blacks and left out whites and other minorities born in the southern African nation - some the descendants of several generations of settlers. ANC Daily News Briefing
  • Does the bedrock constitutional principle of equal protection for all require affirmative action, merely allow it, or even prohibit it?
  • It proposed that affirmative action be limited to initial preferential treatment, and that a cut-off date be fixed for the programme.
  • Immediate business goals will supersede long-term goals for affirmative action.
  • But religious right leaders had adamantly opposed him because of his views on abortion and affirmative action.
  • This is a question which, of course, nobody could answer, and which, in fact, the fuglemen of ‘affirmative action’ were, and still are, very unwilling to have asked in public.
  • These people are usually drawn from the employee assistance, human resources, health promotion, affirmative action or equal employment departments.
  • Individuals within each agency are also assigned affirmative action roles. Human Resource Management in Government
  • After many years of bashing from pundits and politicians, affirmative action is on the ropes.
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