0 present participle of redress
1 to put right a wrong or give payment for a wrong that has been done:
The essays here go some way to redressing that balance.
Redressing the tensions created by this social inequality remains paramount in helping to achieve the positive benefits of decentralisation.
History making, far from redressing this problem, has compounded it.
This view of justice is somewhat different from the idea of redressing past wrongs.
Fiscal reform was a critical component of this, as it contributed both to redressing distortionary state interventions and to cementing fragile macroeconomic stabilisation plans.
While they do not take political sides, their concern for redressing the balance by raising otherwise unheard voices in itself leads to an imbalance.
The suggestion of ensuring that teaching has some focus on successful ageing would be helpful in redressing the balance of clinical work.
What affirmative measures in the realm of language policy can char t the clearest course toward redressing these inequalities?