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View definitions for reverse discrimination

reverse discrimination

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Example Sentences

According to one study by researchers from Harvard University and the University of Tel Aviv, trainers commonly report hostility and resistance from employees who feel forced to do the training and threatened by what they see as reverse discrimination; it also says the programmes can often leave trainees feeling more hostility towards other groups.

From BBC

By the ‘90s, the phrase had become a conservative catch-phrase not for workforce or university diversity policies, but for a pandemic of smart, hardworking white people having to give up their hard-earned college admission slots to lazier, less intelligent students because they aren’t white. Of course, no such pandemic was happening; the U.S. Labor Department, amid a national fervor over affirmative action, conducted a workforce study and found that so-called “reverse discrimination” was only occurring a marginal amount of times in affirmative action policies — less than 2%.

From Salon

In South Korea - despite a small increase in the share of women elected - a feeling among many young men of reverse discrimination played out in this year's election.

From BBC

Miller has gone from theory to action in his role with America First Legal, amplifying the myth of reverse discrimination.

From Salon

Miller’s narrative is a deliberate attempt to weaponize “colorblindness” and allegations of reverse discrimination to dismantle programs fostering equity.

From Salon

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From Roget's 21st Century Thesaurus, Third Edition Copyright © 2013 by the Philip Lief Group.

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