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Class |
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class n. in legal (not sociological) terms, all those persons in the same category, level of rights (e.g. heirs of dead person who are related by the same degree), or who have suffered from the same incident. Whether a person is part of a class is often crucial in determining who can sue on behalf of the people who have been similarly damaged or collect his/her share if a class action judgment is given. (See: class action) CLASS. The order according to which are arranged or distributed, or are
supposed to be arranged or distributed, divers persons or things; thus we
say, a class of legatees.
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? References in periodicals archive |
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The argument in this paper that there are severe class limits to the reproduction of norms of reciprocity between working-class people, and to their practices of mutual aid, actually flies in the face of the neoliberal idea that working-class people under the onslaught of a neoliberal attack can 'bootstrap' themselves up through mutual aid--an idea which, as Petras (1997) says, is very dear to many NGOS and post-Marxists. Over the weekend, I can monitor thousands of students' activities, add a section here, adjust class limits there, watch room utilization, and make sure everything works smoothly. It's good to be rigorous aboutgrammar and punctuation, but using Wigginton's system in English class limits one's self--and one's students--to trivialities. |
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