0 present participle of redress --
1 to put right a wrong or give payment for a wrong that has been done: --
It does so by redressing the balance between offenders and victims in ways which are deemed to be socially acceptable through the adoption of particular ideologically justified prescriptions for punishment.
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.
To this embittered youth, the military not only fails at redressing social wrongs; it also upholds the country's inequalities.
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.
Our findings imply that collective action can be an effective means of redressing resource degradation and increasing community wealth.
She faults social historians for investigating only the first two and sees her own study as redressing the balance.
What affirmative measures in the realm of language policy can char t the clearest course toward redressing these inequalities?