0 the process of removing someone from an important position or job:
The committee's chairperson is facing a possible ouster.
1 the act of removing someone from an important position or job:
The criteria for ouster imply two conditions on the challenger's coalition.
Countries in which the democratic transition included the ouster of the incumbent, on the other hand, have on the whole performed better.
The ensuing result of his own ouster was transformed to become ominous and sure.
That the ouster of women from the guilds happened during the same time span as the barring of illegitimates is no historical coincidence.
After his ouster, he went back to college to obtain a postgraduate diploma in parliamentary studies and was subsequently detained for several months and then released in 2004.
That is the hypothesis that there is no ouster clause.
So it is with exclusion and ouster orders that we are mostly concerned.
It subsumes the orders currently made by the court which are commonly known as ouster orders and exclusion orders.