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23 Sentences With "ethicality"

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

She reads this new site as an effort "to gaslight people" into embracing a shallow ethicality built around porn.
While the debate on the legality, and ethicality, of this ban rages on, children around the world continue to suffer.
In fact, both Britain's National Farmers' Union and the Soil Association have called into question the ethicality of the marketing.
But what's not is that the site is a repository of industry understandings of ethicality and a recognition that those understandings are diverse and squishy.
Specifically, the first study asked participants to rate a hypothetical attorney on measures of ethicality; when the attorney was identified as female, respondents expected more ethical traits from her.
So today you can find adult performers and producers in the media talking about ethicality as a mix of safe workplace conditions, respect for consent and performer comfort, transparency, and fair pay.
Whether the treatment advertised is the only one of its kind or proven effective, or the product's cost and availability are accessible to the targeted population, are, according to him, the deciding factors of ethicality.
These partnerships must expand to ensure we meet needs across the continuum of care, and those holding the purse strings should recognize the value and ethicality to care for women wherever they are in their health journey.
These are the intended results of most incentivizing programs, although questions of their ethicality remain.
On the other hand, Lee created his visual commentary on ethicality issues of sex. He placed genital-shaped objects on trees, liquor bottles, boots, and other objects in order to challenge the common notion of abashment about sexual images.
While some question the ethicality of such artificial selection, it is generally seen as an important alternative to prenatal diagnosis. Prevention of secondary immunodeficiency involves monitoring patients carefully with high risk of developing hypogammaglobulinemia. This entails measuring immunoglobulin levels in patients with hematologic malignancy, or those receiving chemotherapy or immunosuppressive therapy such as rituximab.
Procedural justice also is a major factor that contributes to the expression of employee dissent. It correlates positively with managers' upward dissent. With procedural justice there is a greater deal of fairness in the workplace. There are six rules that apply to procedural justice, "Leventhal's rules", are consistence, bias suppression, accuracy, correctability, representativeness, and ethicality.
Electroconvulsive therapy (known as ECT) is when electric currents are applied to someone with a mental disorder who is not responding well to other forms of therapy. Psychosurgery, including deep brain stimulation, is another available treatment for some disorders. This form of therapy is disputed in many cases on its ethicality and effectiveness. Creative therapies are sometimes used, including music therapy, art therapy or drama therapy.
Without any act of accountability the ethicality of the discourse is no longer valid and cannot go on. Public accountability consists of three basic factors. The factors are a diversity of ideas, an engagement of public decision making, and finally an account for continuing a practice or way of doing something or a means or reason for changing the practice. Finally, public discourse ethics puts a great responsibility on the individual.
Procedural justice is defined as the fairness of the processes that lead to outcomes. When individuals feel that they have a voice in the process or that the process involves characteristics such as consistency, accuracy, ethicality, and lack of bias then procedural justice is enhanced (Leventhal, 1980). According to the article, , procedural justice is the appropriateness of the allocation process. it includes six main point which are consistency, lack of bias, accuracy, representation of all concerned, correction and ethics.
Crowd manipulation is the intentional use of techniques based on the principles of crowd psychology to engage, control, or influence the desires of a crowd in order to direct its behavior toward a specific action. This practice is common to religion, politics and business and can facilitate the approval or disapproval or indifference to a person, policy, or product. The ethicality of crowd manipulation is commonly questioned. Crowd manipulation differs from propaganda although they may reinforce one another to produce a desired result.
Wilkinson for example charges nudges for being manipulative, while others such as Yeung (2012) question their scientific credibility. Public opinion on the ethicality of nudges has also been shown to be susceptible to “partisan nudge bias”. Research from David Tannenbaum, Craig R. Fox, and Todd Rogers (2017) found that adults and policymakers in the United States found behavioral policies to be more ethical when they aligned with their own political leanings. Conversely, people found these same mechanisms to be more unethical when they differed from their politics.
TeenPact students occasionally organize "Student Projects," which may involve a political activity or other types of volunteering. TeenPact's founder, Tim Echols, was on one occasion the subject of questions regarding the ethicality of TeenPact students working on a political campaign (John Oxendine's unsuccessful 2010 GA gubernatorial campaign). A formal ethics complaint was filed against Echols, then serving as Oxendine's campaign manager, alleging that his Gold Dome Consulting firm improperly benefited from TeenPact volunteers.Archived copy of the ethics complaint, later dismissed"TeenPact kids' campaign efforts raise questions," Atlanta Journal-Constitution, July 1, 2010.
A banishment room (also known as a chasing-out-room and a boredom room) is a modern employee exit management strategy whereby employees are transferred to another department where they are assigned meaningless work until they become disheartened and resign. Since the resignation is voluntary, the employee would not be eligible for certain benefits. The legality and ethicality of the practice is questionable and may be construed as constructive dismissal in some regions. The practice, which is not officially acknowledged, is common in Japan which has strong labor laws and a tradition of permanent employment.
Posthumous sperm retrieval (PSR) is a procedure in which spermatozoa are extracted from a human male after he has been pronounced legally brain dead. There has been significant debate over the ethicality and legality of the procedure, and on the legal rights of the child and surviving parent if the gametes are used for impregnation.Orr, RD; Siegler, M (2002) Is posthumous semen retrieval ethically permissible? J Med Ethics 2002;28:299–302 Cases of post-mortem conception have occurred ever since human artificial insemination techniques were first developed, with sperm donated to a sperm bank being used following the death of the donor.
Guilt-free consumption (GFC) is a pattern of consumption based on the minimization of the sense of guilt which consumers incur when purchasing products or commercial services. The spread of ethical consumerism, and the following availability of information about the ethicality of products, can be understood as the driving force of guilt free consumption. In this sense, the feeling of guilt experienced by consumers is fostered by their knowledge of the potential consequences of their choices. The tension between consumers' values and the awareness that their actions may run counter to those same values, manifests itself as a potent, nagging guilt.
The concept of drone journalism was first explored in 2002 at The Poynter Institute for Media Studies by Larry Larsen who looked at the ethical and practical use of unmanned aerial vehicles for reporting and research. Larsen taught journalists from around the world about the capabilities and possibilities of using an Unmanned aerial vehicle for investigative reporting and in the summer of 2003 built the first UAV specifically for drone journalism using a quadcopter platform streaming wireless video that was recorded in the field using an Archos AV300. In 2012 Matt Waite founded the University of Nebraska-Lincoln's Drone Journalism Lab to explore how drones can be used for reporting. More specifically, the lab's purpose is to provide a place for the study of the ethicality, legality, and practicality of drone use in journalism.
Ivy was considered “one of the nation’s top physiologists” and “the conscience of U.S. Science” at the time of the Nuremberg trials in 1946, according to an article in Time magazine. At the Nuremberg trials, the German physician, Dr. Werner Leibbrant was interrogated on the stand and it became evident that the Germans questioning him were attempting to identify parallels between the medical research they did during the war and the human subjects research taking place in the states especially at Stateville, Illinois. This was unexpected for the United States front, and the biggest challenge for disputing these attempts was that there were no concrete guidelines and/or written documentation for the ethics of human medical experimentation. After Ivy initially appeared at the Nuremberg courtroom in January 1947 and heard these proceedings, he went back to Illinois and asked the state Governor, Dwight H. Green, to set up a committee with him as the lead to assess the ethicality of the prisoner experiments that took place at Stateville.

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