Sentences with phrase «reason for the segregation»

Part of the reason for the segregation within membership is the segregation in administration of many churches.
I kept waiting for them to list the obvious reason for the segregation but they never did.
Whatever might be the reason for this segregation, experts believe that there is nothing wrong with sugar daddy dating.

Not exact matches

* worship God, who has never been, at any time for any reason, a capricious God of death, war, murder, destruction, violence, abuse, vengeance, hate, fear, lies, slavery, systemic injustice, oppression, conditional acceptance, exclusion, segregation, discrimination, shunning, ostracism, eternal condemnation, eternal punishment, retribution, sacrifices, patriarchy, matriarchy, empire, nationalism, only one culture, only one race or portion of the population, parochialism, sectarianism, dogma, creeds, pledges, oaths or censorship — and who has never behaved as a Greco - Roman or narcissistic deity.
Furthermore, research reveals that income - based residential segregation, increasing since the 1980s, is another critical reason that schools have not been able to level the playing field for low and high income children.
The decision was momentous for the opposite reason: it halted the startlingly short - lived national effort to desegregate public schools, heavily segregated by race because of widespread segregation in housing.
Consider reasons for regional differences in segregation practices.
The Ofsted chief advised that changes introduced by the Department for Education (DfE) to strengthen independent school standards in relation to fundamental British values were not being followed and said that any form of segregation without good educational reason will likely lead to inadequate inspection judgements.
This report, however, emphasizes economic — rather than racial — segregation for a few reasons.
There are several «reasons» for the ongoing segregation in Connecticut schools and in many others nationwide.
The reasons for educational disparities like this may be less deliberate than in the era of forced segregation, but the effects are no less insidious.
Lecker's latest commentary piece is a «must read» for many reasons, but «the most disturbing issue of all is that creating separate schools for «gifted» children violates Connecticut law and policies prohibiting school segregation
Like all the other governors listed here, Cuomo has chosen to ignore the real reasons for educational problems: poverty, segregation and inequitable distribution of resources and has focused his sights on those miscreant teachers, who have only dedicated their lives to working with children.
Reason for despair: The continued tacit acceptance of deep racial and social segregation across most of our school system, from prekindergarten through colleges and grad schools.
While other research has examined the positive aspects of integration in schools through gentrification, this policy memo delineates the reasons for which parents of color were resistant to rezoning their schools in the face of this gentrification and a growing support for integration as a means to solve issues of funding, resources, and segregation in New York City.
By contrast, administrative segregation can be imposed with little process, for indefinite periods of time and often for highly general reasons that prisoners do not know in advance.
The WSJ Blog summary opines that the case does not overturn Brown v. Board of Education (which abolished the «separate but equal» justification for school segregation), but rather, amplifies it to stand for the proposition that schools can not look at race at all, no matter the reason for doing so.
In contrast, under the regime challenged in this case, federally incarcerated persons can be placed in administrative segregation for a variety of vague and general reasons, such as belief on the part of prison administrators that the prisoner threatens the safety of the prison or anyone in the prison.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z