Justice
in sentence
2482 examples of Justice in a sentence
And eventually you get to places where it is formidable and dangerous and unfortunately slides just don't do
justice.
One is reciprocity, and associated with it is a sense of
justice
and a sense of fairness.
In my high school, Ursuline Academy, the nuns made service and social
justice
a high priority in the school.
I hope that they'll be very proud of me for living out what they taught us about social
justice
and service.
It's rooted in a principle of retributive justice, or an eye for an eye, so retaliatory killings have led to several deaths in the area.
And bail was never, ever intended to create a two-tier system of justice: one for the rich and one for everybody else.
I have watched as questions of
justice
were subsumed by questions of money, calling into question the legitimacy of the entire American legal system.
We have a proven model, a plan of action, and a growing network of bail disrupters who are audacious enough to dream big and fight hard, one bail at a time, for as long it takes, until true freedom and equal
justice
are a reality in America.
The thing is, his understanding of what
justice
entailed was very different from my own.
Among the most frequent responses was liberty and
justice.
A full third of those who braved tanks and tear gas to ask or to demand liberty and
justice
in Egypt were women.
Eighty percent of the people on death row are people who had exposure to the juvenile
justice
system.
We could be providing special schools, at both the high school level and the middle school level, but even in K-5, that target economically and otherwise disadvantaged kids, and particularly kids who have had exposure to the juvenile
justice
system.
Even if we do all of those things, some kids are going to fall through the cracks and they're going to end up in that last chapter before the murder story begins, they're going to end up in the juvenile
justice
system.
Unlike what you may have seen on "Law & Order: SVU,
" justice
is rare for victims of gender violence.
And that's really important, because educational institutions have historically swept gender violence under the rug, much like our criminal
justice
system does today.
So as a victims' rights attorney fighting to increase the prospect of
justice
for survivors across the country and as a survivor myself, I'm not here to say, "Time's Up."
It's not a mysterious arc of history bending toward
justice.
And when we realized that we were growing for food
justice
in the South Bronx, so did the international community.
It was effective not just because
justice
was seen to be done where there was a huge void.
I can try to tell you what it was like, but you'll never know what it was like, and the more I try to explain that I felt lonely, I was the only human being in 5.4 million square-miles, it was cold, nearly minus 75 with windchill on a bad day, the more words fall short, and I'm unable to do it
justice.
So if you really care about strengthening families, you might want to talk to some liberal groups who are working on promoting educational equality, who are working on raising the minimum wage, who are working on finding ways to stop so many men from being sucked into the criminal
justice
system and taken out of the marriage market for their whole lives.
And most surprisingly to me, they sometimes can even see eye to eye on criminal
justice.
And at times they have worked with the Southern Poverty Law Center to oppose the building of new prisons and to work for reforms that will make the
justice
system more efficient and more humane.
Young Libyan women and men were at the forefront calling for the fall of the regime, raising slogans of freedom, dignity, social
justice.
Let's go back before Christ, three millennia, to a time when, at least in my head, the journey for justice, the march against inequality and poverty really began.
This is a couple at a later stage of life, Charlie Bresler and Diana Schott, who, when they were young, when they met, were activists against the Vietnam War, fought for social justice, and then moved into careers, as most people do, didn't really do anything very active about those values, although they didn't abandon them.
Yet whether you're a rationalist or a mystic, whether you think the words Muhammad heard that night came from inside himself or from outside, what's clear is that he did experience them, and that he did so with a force that would shatter his sense of himself and his world and transform this otherwise modest man into a radical advocate for social and economic
justice.
"There is no
justice
in the world.
There is some
justice
in the world.
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