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Redress is a setting right, as of injury, oppression, or wrong. Redress may refer to: *
Redress of grievances The right to petition government for redress of grievances is the right to make a complaint to, or seek the assistance of, one's government, without fear of punishment or reprisals. In Europe, Article 44 of the Charter of Fundamental Rights of ...
or right to petition ** Redress of grievances in the United States *
Legal redress In jurisprudence, reparation is replenishment of a previously inflicted loss by the criminal to the victim. Monetary restitution is a common form of reparation. Background In the Basic Principles and Guidelines on the Right to a Remedy and Repara ...
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Redress (charitable organisation) Redress, or The Redress Trust, is a human rights organisation based in London, England, that helps survivors of torture to obtain justice and reparation, in the form of compensation, rehabilitation, official acknowledgement of the wrong and forma ...
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Redress Control Number The No Fly List, maintained by the United States federal government's Threat Screening Center (TSC), is one of several lists used by the Transportation Security Administration's Secure Flight program and airlines to decide who to allow to board ...
, an identification number issued to travelers who would otherwise be subjected to excessive scrutiny at U.S. security checkpoints *
REDress Project The REDress Project by Jaime Black is a public art installation that was created in response to the missing and murdered Indigenous women (MMIW) epidemic in Canada and the United States. The on-going project began in 2010 and commemorates missi ...
, a Canadian public art installation *
Collective redress Collective redress is a legal term used within the European Union to define a legal instrument for group proceedings similar to the US concept of a class action. Collective redress is embodied in Directive (EU) 2020/1828, the ''Directive on represe ...
, a legal concept *
Japanese American redress and court cases The following article focuses on the movement to obtain Reparation (legal), redress for the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II, and significant court cases that have shaped Civil and political rights, civil and human rights for J ...
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Japanese Canadian Redress From 1942 to 1949, Canada forcibly relocated and incarcerated over 22,000 Japanese Canadians—comprising over 90% of the total Japanese Canadian population—from British Columbia in the name of "national security". The majority were Canadian ...
, a 1988 agreement regarding the internment of Japanese Canadians during World War II


See also

*
set redress In film, a redress is the redecoration of an existing movie set so that it can double for another set. This saves the trouble and expenses of constructing a second, new set, though they face the difficulty of doing it so the average viewer does no ...
* {{Disambiguation