Sentences with phrase «culture than skin»

Doesn't white as being discussed relate more to culture than skin color or race?

Not exact matches

De Luca's team used a patch of skin a little bigger than a U.S. postage stamp from an unblistered part of the boy's groin to culture epidermal cells, which include stem cells that periodically regenerate the skin.
Patients were excluded from this analysis if more than a single RFLP type was recovered on the culture of the skin biopsy specimen or if no blood culture was done.
However, even for type 1 — infected patients, more than 40 % were neither spirochetemic by the culture methods used in this study nor had multiple erythema migrans skin lesions.
The principle of Human Rights applies to everyone; including those who have a different skin color than ours, or a different religion, a different culture, a different status, as well as to those who come from a different country or are multi cultural!
One study demonstrated that the skin of healthy dogs has a much higher diversity and population of microbial cultures than that of dogs with skin allergies.2
The yellow skin color indicates a universal figure, rather than a direct reference to a specific race or culture, which reflects the highly diverse population of Brazil and the world.
And it certainly wasn't heaven for Jean Carter and Marlene Wilson who were there not so many years before, for no other reason than the colour of their skin, separated from family, mother, culture, land.
Factors contributing to our disadvantage are more than phantoms haunting us, they are very much alive today in the form of everyday and structural racism — the discrimination, marginalisation and substantive inequality faced by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people due to our ethnicity — the colour of our skin, and the view, implicit or explicit, that somehow our relative disadvantage in society is because of our own failure or weakness as individuals, or a result of practicing our culture.
Factors contributing to our disadvantage are more than phantoms haunting us, they are very much alive today in the form of everyday and structural racism - the discrimination, marginalisation and substantive inequality faced by Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people due to our ethnicity — the colour of our skin, and the view, implicit or explicit, that somehow our relative disadvantage in society is because of our own failure or weakness as individuals, or a result of practicing our culture.
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