Separating acts or practices, separating or separating people or objects from other people or entities or groups.
Ethnicity, race, religion, other ethnic minorities are separated from majority
Sector / noun · adjective · noun · noun · adjective · noun · noun · noun · noun · noun · noun · noun position · Al adjective
Practice or policy of social act of creating separate facilities for minority in the same society
Metallurgy This is the process of separating alloy or solid solution components in small areas of solid or solid surface.
In the 1550's, "isolated behavior" came from behavioral nouns from the Latin word of Latin separation, Segregare past past participle stems (see Separation). That means "an isolated state" is from the 1660s. From 1883, it proved a specific understanding of the United States of "compulsory separation of race"
We rarely face the challenge of value, purpose, meaning of the country we love, not our own growth and wealth, or our welfare and safety. The problem of equal rights for black Americans is such a problem. If we defeat all enemies, double the wealth, conquer the stars, but still not the same as this problem, we will fail either as a state or as a nation. [Lyndon Johnson, Presentation of the Voting Rights Bill on March 15, 1965]
Especially separation of alleles during meiosis, members of each pair of alleles appear in different gametes
Implement policies and practices for racial discrimination. In the United States, the apartheid policy deprives African-American citizenship, especially providing inferior facilities and services in public schools (see Brown and Board of Education), housing and industry. (Integration, national association for progress of colored people, and separated but identical things.)
New Culture Literacy Dictionary, 3rd Edition Copyright © 2005 Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Houghton Published by Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Copyright
Following Brown v. Board of Education in 1954, the federal government issued a series of Supreme Court rulings to prevent legal isolation at schools in the United States. All legally enforced public separation (legal separation) was abolished by the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Passage of the demo during the civil rights movement has led to public opinion opposed to legal mandatory separation. De facto "actual" isolation - isolation without legal sanctions - continues to this extent to varying degrees. The modern apartheid seen in residential areas in the United States is determined by factors such as public policy, discrimination of housing loans, red wire and so on. Geographical grouping of ethnic groups leads to de facto isolation for economic factors or choices (white flight)
Although most research on economic separation focuses on income, I believe economic separation is the product of three factors widely influenced by socio-economic class, income, education, and profession. In our income separation scale we are investigating the isolation of the poor (families below the poverty level) and the wealthy (families with incomes over 200,000 dollars). Measurement of our educational isolation reflects the separation of non-high school graduates (or adults with inadequate high school diplomas) and college graduates. Measurement of occupational separation combines separation of creative class, service class (low skill, low wage service work), and work class (work class of blue color).