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18 Sentences With "unfairly disadvantaged"

How to use unfairly disadvantaged in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "unfairly disadvantaged" and check conjugation/comparative form for "unfairly disadvantaged". Mastering all the usages of "unfairly disadvantaged" from sentence examples published by news publications.

This could leave retail investors unfairly disadvantaged without the same levels of information, and remain a hurdle to getting institutional investors comfortable with crypto-assets.
When whites perceive their group's dominant status is threatened or their group is unfairly disadvantaged, however, their racial identity may become salient and politically relevant.
Mr. Trump thinks the United States has been unfairly disadvantaged by sweeping free-trade agreements like the North American Free Trade Agreement or the Trans-Pacific Partnership.
But imposing punitive tariffs on U.S. goods would require detailed proof to be gathered that European companies were being unfairly disadvantaged - a process that would take many months.
"[T]oo many American workers who are as qualified, willing, and deserving to work in these fields have been ignored or unfairly disadvantaged," the agency said in a statement.
Moreover, INCOMPAS has argued that content providers (also known as "edge providers") would be unfairly disadvantaged in the event that AT&T, Verizon, and other major telecoms are granted gatekeeper status over the internet.
Unfortunately, due to ill-considered nationalization of the flood insurance program in 2628, the threat of continued illegal regulation of flood insurance by federal lending regulators and the insertion of severely flawed technical language in previous reform legislation, private flood insurers have been unfairly disadvantaged.
There are lots of reasons women may be disinclined to run for office — including the broad suite of structural barriers related to gender norms and family life that tend to limit women's access to all manner of high-powered jobs — but one reason is the perception that a woman candidate is likely to be unfairly disadvantaged.
He argued that air travel between Great Britain and Northern Ireland should be exempt from air passenger duty, on the basis that the tax unfairly disadvantaged Northern Ireland compared with the rest of the United Kingdom given the limited alternative means of travelling between Belfast and London.
Retrieved 18 December 2007 ITV confirmed that Jackson performed strongly throughout the series and won on the night of the final by around 10% of the popular vote."Walsh defends The X Factor result", The Guardian 18 December 2007. Retrieved 18 December 2007 A subsequent Ofcom investigation found that Roberts had not been unfairly disadvantaged.
In 2004, Bennett campaigned for the office of Governor of Washington. She gained access to the ballot only after persuading a state court that changes to the state's primary system had unfairly disadvantaged minority parties. She was open about the fact that she is a lesbian. Her campaign emphasized gay rights and she was the only candidate to support the legalization of same-sex marriage in the state of Washington.
Most educated middle- or upper-class individuals are for things such as the death penalty, minimum sentences, and trying juveniles as adults, which combined with social stigmas make blacks unfairly disadvantaged in the realm of criminal justice. For example, in recent times, these effects can be seen in an increase in police brutality towards minorities. Statistically, it is 2.5 times more likely for blacks to be killed than whites.
Common use of the term, in the realm of business ethics, has been criticized by scholar Gregory S. Kavka writing in the Journal of Business Ethics. Kavka refers back to philosophical concepts of retribution by Thomas Hobbes. He states that if something supposedly held up as a moral standard or common social rule is violated enough in society, then an individual or group within society can break that standard or rule as well, since this keeps them from being unfairly disadvantaged. As well, in specific circumstances violations of social rules can be defensible if done as direct responses to other violations.
In 2011 an audit, designed to find if that Black and Latino renters were unfairly disadvantaged in regards to the housing market, found that in 64% of the 50 tests done, discrimination took place. This discrimination violated local, state and federal housing laws however of May 2011 no action had been taken against the landlords who discriminated. This audit came after a similar one in 2009 which found that landlords discriminated against Black renters in two-thirds of the tests in Ashland and 78% of the tests in Beaverton. In 2017, a double murder was committed by white supremacist Jeremy Joseph Christian.
IMS is generally believed to have made significant leaps of progress forward from the IOR rule it displaced in terms of fairness and accuracy. IMS racing declined seriously in the early 2000s. A raft of new technology developments in yacht design led to a situation where the very largest and most expensive yachts were able to gain a significant technology advantage which the rule was less able to account for. Smaller yacht owners began to feel unfairly disadvantaged under the rule and between 2003 and 2007 much handicap racing around the world changed to using the newer IRC rule.
The amendment was authored by Senator Carl Levin who stated, "This amendment corrects an anomaly in the law that unfairly disadvantaged some people who had begun their naturalization process before 2002. Tanith Belbin began her naturalization process in 2000, but due to changes that were made to the law in 2002, the process has taken significantly longer than it would have if she had filed her paperwork 2 years later." Belbin lived and trained in Canton, Michigan, for many years, before moving to Aston, Pennsylvania. After 2010, Belbin decided to move back to Michigan to attend Eastern Michigan University and be closer to friends and family, including then-boyfriend Charlie White.
The WVSSAC historical records take no note of these champions, and does not note that its champions prior to that year competed in a system that excluded many of the state's best athletes. West Virginia was one of only three states to hold girls' basketball in the fall, and girls' volleyball in the winter, ostensibly due to facility shortages at various high schools. Eventually the West Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals ruled that this unfairly disadvantaged girls in competition for college scholarships and the organization was forced to adopt a traditional schedule. There have also been complaints that the disparity of enrollment in Class AAA makes it difficult for the smaller schools in the classification to compete, particularly in football.
Part II of the Education Act gave effect to students' freedom of association by mandating that students must be permitted to opt out of any students' union without being unfairly disadvantaged; this provision replaced am earlier proposal that would have made membership voluntary (i.e. opt-in), which had been seen to have a significant impact on membership of students' unions in Australia and was expected to have a similar impact in the UK. This Part also places further restrictions on Students' Unions by requiring that affiliation to external organizations must be voted on at referendum if 5% of the membership requests a referendum and restricts the time a sabbatical officer can serve to two years. It also stipulates that a students' union must be governed democratically and must be accountable for its finances. There are various other clauses about the finances and external affiliations of students' unions.

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