0 to correct something that is wrong, unfair, or not equal -- wynagrodzić, zrekompensować
laws aimed at redressing racial inequality
1 payment for an action or situation that is wrong or unfair -- rekompensata
As both religious and civil laws had a role to play in turning out good citizens, then a defect in the one had to be redressed in the other.
In particular, racial liberals may fear that expressing opposition to affirmative action might lend political support to the broader effort to weaken social policies aimed at redressing racial inequality.
By implication, the balance should be redressed.
To this embittered youth, the military not only fails at redressing social wrongs; it also upholds the country's inequalities.
He attempts to show that the new constitution redresses many of the institutional problems associated with strong executive authority in the absence of proper checks.
One of the major ways in which vulnerabilities can be redressed is through empowerment of the vulnerable.
In the present section, we work toward redressing this problem in providing an outline of the roles and responsibilities of clinical caregivers.
In this article, a series of steps is taken with the aim of redressing this situation.