Equality
in sentence
1024 examples of Equality in a sentence
The left, in turn, claims to stand for
equality.
But what kind of
equality?
American political philosopher Elizabeth Anderson calls this the standard of democratic
equality.
Similarly, on a number of questions concerning gender
equality
– including political leadership, equal access to higher education, and wifely obedience – the numbers continued a downward trend.
Indeed,
equality
among races is an important Muslim value and practice.
Equality
of the sexes poses the gravest difficulties--particularly because Muslim girls in Britain increasingly assert it.
But these measures are misleading, because they do not account for many of the things that matter to societies, such as equality, social mobility, or sustainability.
A highly sanitized and sentimental historical accounting of the 1950s and 1960s might seem to suggest that the civil-rights movement succeeded merely by appealing to arch-American political principles of freedom and
equality.
It will also enable Arabs to develop a new paradigm for relations with the West, based on
equality
and partnership – a position that Turkey has come to symbolize.
The French Republican model enshrines the laudable abstract principles of liberty, equality, and fraternity.
There is nothing new about rulers persecuting people who fight for human rights, gender equality, the rule of law, LGBTI rights, and socially and ecologically oriented economic policies.
Today, ideas about full employment and
equality
remain at the heart of social democracy.
Liberty, equality, and fraternity are enemies of the nationalist, extremist, and europhobic visions benighting Europe today.
In Israel, an Israeli Arab-Palestinian minority has full citizenship, even if much remains to be done to afford it full social and economic
equality.
Specific goals should include improved gender wage
equality
and a better balance between agricultural exporters’ prosperity and that of agricultural workers, many of whom are indigenous.
Crony capitalism can be understood as a system, which, though based on some market relations and private ownership, fails to respect such important rules as the enforce-ability of law, free and fair competition,
equality
of opportunity, protection of ownership, transparency, and public control.
The next generation of technological advances could also promote greater income
equality
by leveling the playing field in education.
Its politicians and officials have translated the vague trinity of liberty, equality, and fraternity into a concrete form: 80,000 pages of laws that cover rights and regulations from the bedroom to the factory floor.
The danger in this is that cherry-picking certain rights to enforce secular norms will not just undermine the overall project of human rights, which aims to unite the world’s peoples and improve lives through a shared understanding of the minimum conditions necessary to advance the “inherent dignity” and
equality
of “all members of the human family.”
And they can promote qualities like perseverance, teamwork, and leadership – the kinds of soft skills employers seek in job candidates – while even supporting gender
equality.
The great challenge is to increase equality, and for this the State, which globalization claims to have overthrown, is vital.
At the same time, the G20’s agenda became cluttered with issues – from climate change to gender
equality
– making it less a platform for action than a discussion forum, at a time when what the world really needs is a proactive and dynamic player.
And the rest of Europe might never follow the example of Scandinavia, where gender
equality
has advanced much further than anywhere else.
Indeed, intellectuals and politicians of all varieties almost unanimously hail the politics of caste identity as a move towards true
equality.
Tocqueville saw this strictly ordered world being replaced by democracy and formal social equality, in which everyone would be equally free, but would also be equally at the mercy of society.
I believe that the West is a mindset defined by three fundamental traits that cannot easily be found in the so-called Eastern civilizations: a passion for innovation, a capacity for self-criticism, and gender
equality.
The same goes with gender
equality.
Nowadays, gender
equality
has become the norm.
Some would argue that gender
equality
is a consequence of the modernization process, not of Westernization.
Equality
of opportunity – who knows, perhaps even a fairer distribution of income – is what the formerly smug, self-assured Davos man left out of the equation.
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