Examples of equality in the following topics:
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- Separate but equal laws supported segregation in the south by stating that providing comparable public services did not violate equal rights.
- In particular the principle of separate but equal established conditions of legalsegregation in many southern states.
- The idea was that the requirement for equality under the fourteenth amendment was still met under these circumstances.
- But the court ruled that the principle of separate but equal satisfied the requirements of the fourteenth amendment.
- Describe the legal background for a policy of "separate but equal"
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- Social equality must include equal rights under the law, such as security , voting rights, freedom of speech and assembly, property rights, and equal access to social goods and services.
- Since social equality includes equal opportunities and obligations, it involves the whole of society.
- In the classical sense, equality of opportunity is closely aligned with the concepts of equality under the law and meritocracy.
- Thus, policies that seek an equality of outcome often require a deviation from the strict application of concepts such as meritocracy and legal notions of equality before the law for all citizens.
- Compare and contrast equality of opportunity with the outcome of opportunities
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- Separate but equal was a legal doctrine in American constitutional law that justified systems of segregation.
- The doctrine of "separate but equal" was legitimized in the 1896 Supreme Court case, Plessy v.
- Segregated schools were created for students, as long as they followed "separate but equal".
- The doctrine of "separate but equal" was eventually overturned by the Linda Brown v.
- A store catering to "whites only" under the separate but equal doctrine.
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- Kepler's second law states: A line joining a planet and the Sun sweeps out equal areas during equal intervals of time.
- A line joining a planet and the Sun sweeps out equal areas during equal intervals of time .
- So the planet has to move faster when it is closer to the Sun so that it sweeps equal areas in equal times.
- The shaded regions have equal areas.
- It takes equal times for m to go from A to B, from C to D, and from E to F.
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- An equation states that two expressions are equal, while an inequality relates two different values.
- An equation is a mathematical statement that asserts the equality of two expressions.
- This is written by placing the expressions on either side of an equals sign (=), for example:
- The notation $a \neq b$ means that a is not equal to $b$.
- In either case, $a$ is not equal to $b$.
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- The Equal Pay Act of 1963 is a U.S.
- Based on this, both Charlie and Lucy should receive equal salaries as they are doing what is considered "substantially equal work. "
- Nonetheless, the EPA's equal pay for equal work goals have not been completely achieved, as demonstrated by the BLS data and Congressional findings within the text of the proposed Paycheck Fairness Act.
- Kennedy signed the Equal Pay Act into law in 1963.
- Explain the reasons and results of the Equal Pay Act of 1963
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- Required reserve ratio equals 5%; the banks hold zero excess reserves, and the public does not withdraw money out of their currency accounts.
- Required reserve ratio equals 20%; the banks hold zero excess reserves, and the public does not withdraw money out of their currency accounts.
- Required reserve ratio equals 10%, and the banks hold zero excess reserves.
- Required reserve ratio equals 10%, and the banks hold zero excess reserves.
- Currency in circulation equals $500 billion; checkable deposits equal $900 billion; total bank reserves are $700 billion, and total time deposits equal $1,200 billion.
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- Because equal temperament divides the octave into twelve equal semi-tones (half steps), the frequency ratio of each semi-tone is the twelfth root of 2.
- In equal temperament, the only pure interval is the octave.
- A cent is 1/100 (the hundredth root) of an equal-temperament semitone.
- Comparing the Frequency Ratios for Equal Temperament and Pure Harmonic Series
- The ratios for equal temperament are all multiples of the twelfth root of two.
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- The long-run equilibrium of a perfectly competitive market occurs when marginal revenue equals marginal costs, which is also equal to average total costs.
- So a firm will produce goods until the marginal costs of production equal the marginal revenues from sales.
- In a perfectly competitive market, long-run equilibrium will occur when the marginal costs of production equal the average costs of production which also equals marginal revenue from selling the goods.
- Firms can't make economic profit; the best they can do is break even so that their revenues equals their costs.
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- The government is providing an efficient quantity of a public good when its marginal benefit equals its marginal cost.
- It is equal to the marginal benefit curve.
- The supply curve for a public good is equal to its marginal cost curve.
- As already noted, the demand curve is equal to the marginal benefit curve, while the supply curve is equal to the marginal cost curve.
- An activity should be stopped at the point where MB equals MC.