Sinead O’Neill
Equality
• Equality- Ensuring that everyone has equal opportunities and rights.
“The state of being equal, especially in status, rights, or opportunites” Oxford dictonary.
‘Our flag is red, white and blue, but our naton is a rainbow- red, yellow, brown, black and white- and we're all precious in God's sight.’
Jesse Jackson
Diversity
• Diversity- The way in which people are different e.g. race, language, ethnicity.
‘’We all live with the objectve of being happy; our lives are all different and yet the same.’’ Anne Frank
Rights
• Rights- Things everyone is entitled too e.g. respect and not be discriminated against. We all have the right to privacy, to live, to marriage and family, to own our own house. To …show more content…
They may start believing what they are being told and give up fighting the discrimination so they get more depressed.
• Physical effects could be self harm, losing weight, suicide attempts, bruising
• Emotion affects could be that the person is constantly depressed, feels low and useless. They may start believing what they hear about themselves.
• Social effects could be that the person loses friends because they have a low self esteem and are paranoid about what people say about them. Could exclude themselves as much as possible to avoid being discriminated.
• Low self esteem someone who has been discriminated against will feel more vulnerable which could’ve been caused by bullying from another home by racism, sexism and being discriminated against because of their age.
• Marginalisation is when someone is shoved to the side of society because of discrimination.
When somebody is marginalized they are mad to feel that they are different and alone. They are left out of society because they are different e.g. disabled elderly people in a different room to the carers when it comes to eating lunch and dinner
Case studies relating to equality and