Equal Rights definition

Equal Rights or "Equally in Rights" means "as shall be living, jointly".
Equal Rights means ensuring equal rights and opportunities to get information for all shareholders, except cases contemplated by legislation;
Equal Rights in the Soviet Union means that the Russian woman is obliged to put her baby in a state-operated nursery or kindergarten so she can join the labor force. Under Soviet law, a woman (as well as a man) can be jailed for refusing to engage in “ socially useful labor” or for leading a “ parasitic way o f life.”

More Definitions of Equal Rights

Equal Rights means “equal rights.” See Petition at 28-32. Under the Tenth Circuit’s theory, the word “equal rights” means “the same opportunity and en- titlement to use up to 25 percent of the excess water in its state and under its state laws.” 656 F.3d at 1246 (emphasis added). With respect, the Tenth Circuit’s theory misreads the Compact.
Equal Rights in Russia means that the women do the heavy, dirty work American women do not do -- but men are still the bosses. Russian women have “ equal rights” to mine coal, load cargo ships, work in heavy construction, and labor in the fields. A typical garbage pickup team consists o f two women hauling the garbage and a man driving the truck. A typical road construction “ brigade” consists o f a dozen women digging ditches while a male “ brigadier” supervises. O f course, the women still do all the housework (without electrical appliances) and all the standing in line to buy food for their families.
Equal Rights means in this context that if we recognize some person’s freedom to act in certain way, then we also recognize that any other person has the same freedom to act in the same way. “People are free to the extent that they are equal, and they are equal to the extent that they are free.” [52, p.25].