stigmatization|stigmatizations in English

noun stigmatization (Amer.)

act of characterizing something as disgraceful; act of marking with a stigma; branding, act of stigmatizing (also stigmatisation)

Use "stigmatization|stigmatizations" in a sentence

Below are sample sentences containing the word "stigmatization|stigmatizations" from the English Dictionary. We can refer to these sentence patterns for sentences in case of finding sample sentences with the word "stigmatization|stigmatizations", or refer to the context using the word "stigmatization|stigmatizations" in the English Dictionary.

1. The most obvious factor is continuing stigmatization and agism.

2. 11 For people living with HIV in Uganda, stigmatization and discrimination represent a major obstacle to effective HIV prevention, treatment, care, and support.

3. Fear of stigmatization inhibits people from taking preventive measures and leads women and men to assess their own risks inadequately.

4. They combine distinct acoustic superiority with invisibility (end of stigmatization), an open ear canal, and hopefully, the end of feedback whistling.

5. In places where Abortion is illegal or severely restricted, the lack of safe services, spaces and accurate information, as well as the fear of stigmatization, force many women to seek out unregulated care, which increases the risk of complications.

6. While the essential role older persons can play as custodians of culture and history is recognized, paradoxically, many contributions to the report acknowledged that prejudice against and stigmatization of older persons (“ageism”) are broadly tolerated in societies across the world.

7. Couser is particularly interested in issues of narrative authority, in how Autopathography can be counterdiscursive to the prevailing biomedical narrative, and, especially, in how Autopathography is counterdiscursive to the cultural stigmatization and marginalization that often accompany illness or disability ["insofar as autobiography is the

8. Texas Tech University, Sara Ananna, December 2019 iv ABSTRACT This study is an attempt to explore the connection between the causes and consequences of the Rohingya refugee crisis, originating in Myanmar and culminating in Bangladesh, through the theoretical framework of alienation, stigmatization, otherization and dehumanization.

9. “Misinformation always plays on the fault lines of our fears and deepest beliefs,” Sinha said, pointing to some of the rumors rife in an increasingly Communalized India — that Muslim youth are refusing coronavirus testing for religious reasons, or the stigmatization of meat-eating by saying that meat-suppliers in west India have shut shop because cattle are infected with the coronavirus.