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  1. In general, economic inequality is an uneven distribution of something – from incomes, resources, goods and states of being through to people’s opportunities to do things, such as to vote in an election or to take care of a child. Discover More.

  2. Equality is a rich, difficult, contested political concept, and the choice among apparently reasonable meanings has implications for the kind of social policies one urges.

  3. 27 de mar. de 2001 · Equality essentially consists of a tripartite relation between two (or several) objects or persons and one (or several) qualities. Two objects A and B are equal in a certain respect if, in that respect, they fall under the same general term. ‘Equality’ denotes the relation between the objects compared.

  4. 26 de sept. de 2011 · The question of equality : lesbian and gay politics in America since Stonewall. by. Deitcher, David. Publication date. 1995. Topics. Gay liberation movement, Gay rights, Gay men, Lesbians, Stonewall Riots, New York, N.Y., 1969. Publisher. New York : Scribner.

  5. 27 de mar. de 2001 · What follows is a brief review of the seven most prominent conceptions of distributive equality, each offering a different answer to one question: in the field of distributive justice, what should be equalized, or what should be the parameter or "currency" of equality?

  6. What Equality? Two central issues for ethical analysis of equality are: (1) Why equality? (2) Equality of what? The two questions are distinct but thoroughly interdependent.

  7. Prof. Elshtain moves from exposition of equality as an essentially contested political concept to examination of Feminist versions of sex equality. The dominant view in the contemporary Feminist movement emphasizes equality of opportunity, but this actually justifies a sharply inegalitarian system.