Vouchers are stigmatised by their opponents as a dangerous idea of the radical right. |
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Nowadays to be bright is to be stigmatised, so better to hide your light under a bushel. |
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No one should be stigmatised for his or her lifestyle choice, but surely the law can ensure that no one has a free ride. |
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It was designed to prevent people sponging on the system but it also stigmatised and humiliated those who applied for relief. |
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Unlike diseases such as Lyme disease, hepatitis B, or hepatitis A, HIV infection remains stigmatised and connected to issues of morality. |
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Citizens undergo useless linguistic ragging while Communities are completely stigmatised. |
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This trauma was exacerbated by the fact that many women who had been raped were stigmatised and ostracised by their spouse, family and community. |
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Neither condescends, still less sneers, at people often stigmatised as poor white trash. |
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Older women can be stigmatised particularly when poverty is acute and accused of witchcraft, leading to violence and expulsion from their homes. |
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Roma and Dalits experience high levels of discrimination and are stigmatised to a severe degree. |
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However, they are often less stigmatised and may have had the opportunity to go to school or to gain prior work experience. |
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Networks of people living with HIV and other stigmatised groups are key actors in effective stigma and discrimination reduction efforts. |
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Many patients usually wish to conceal their condition as far as possible, to avoid embarrassment and being stigmatised by visible physical deformity. |
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Violence and harassment has increased, 25 women have been raped and the women feel more criminalised and stigmatised. |
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Children as well as adults suffer when particular family forms, such as women-headed single parent families, are stigmatised by policies devised by the neo-iberal right. |
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The nature of the crime, the attitude of the community and those around the prisoner's family, and each individual child's character will all affect the extent to which children feel stigmatised. |
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In addition to being stigmatised as traitors, whistleblowers who reported misconduct before the introduction of the Protected Disclosures Act in 2000 found no legal protection or support from their government. |
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Others fear that if bottlefeeding becomes a badge of infection, even women who know they are infected will continue to breastfeed to avoid being stigmatised. In this section Back to the bottle? |
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Members of the squad have told how they were stigmatised and abused. |
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It is the latter, first and foremost, who will pay the high price for this miserable ultraliberal, antinational and antisocial offensive that has been launched against an unjustly stigmatised trade. |
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In London, the Cockney dialect was traditionally used by the lower classes, and it was long a socially stigmatised variety. |
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What is needed is for those who manipulate the winning of their medals and prizes for the sake of profit or fame to be socially stigmatised for it. |
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Attendance and performance may be affected by taking time off to visit parents, while children of prisoners may be bullied or stigmatised because of their situation. |
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Nevertheless, they remain stigmatised and in many parts of the country suffer unequal access to essential services, or because the services to which they have access are of lower quality. |
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In other words, studiousness is stigmatised among black schoolchildren. |
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Dutch Low Saxon has long been stigmatised and removed from schools. |
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