Blida Department of English: Free Stand to Stand Free
Hello dear mate, we'll be pleased to have you joining our community, so would you please register. You have to identify yourself to admin or to the moderators to be able to join the hidden group where you can see all the forum material.

Join the forum, it's quick and easy

Blida Department of English: Free Stand to Stand Free
Hello dear mate, we'll be pleased to have you joining our community, so would you please register. You have to identify yourself to admin or to the moderators to be able to join the hidden group where you can see all the forum material.
Blida Department of English: Free Stand to Stand Free
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.

Someone is Blacklisted!!!

Go down

Someone is Blacklisted!!! Empty Someone is Blacklisted!!!

Post by mimi cici Sat Jun 09, 2012 3:26 pm

When someone is blacklisted, it means that he or she is put on a list of individuals and organizations which have been singled out as deserving of some sort of denial or punishment, with the assumption that they deserve such treatment because of their behavior. For example, in some industries, blacklisting of bad employees is common, and once an employee is blacklisted, it is impossible to find employment in that industry. The legality of blacklisting varies, depending on the situation; in some cases it is perfectly acceptable, whereas in other instances, it is viewed as discrimination.

The origins of the blacklist lie in the merchant community. Historically, when people became bankrupt, they were added to a list kept by neighborhood merchants, who would deny credit and services to bankrupts. Sometimes such lists were publicly posted, adding to the shame and humiliation of bankruptcy. This list came to be known colloquially as a blacklist, and over time the concept spread more generally to include any sort of list of proscribed individuals.

Blacklists are used to deny entrance to social clubs, restaurants, performance venues, stores, and other facilities, often with the justification that people are blacklisted for illegal activity or causing trouble. Since private businesses retain the right to refuse service in many regions of the world, this type of blacklist is not illegal, although a blacklist which included a large number of people from a particular social, ethnic, or religious group could raise eyebrows.
Employee blacklisting is of more ambiguous legality. In some cases, someone is blacklisted due to discriminatory practices, as most notably happened with the Hollywood Blacklist of the 1950s. In these cases, the employee could have grounds for a lawsuit. Often, such blacklists are informal rather than explicit, created through exchanges of information between people in the industry so that it is more difficult to prove that a blacklist really does exist.

Blacklisting for financial reasons is also legal, on the same grounds that businesses can refuse services. Someone who writes bad checks, for example, could be blacklisted from a store, and in some communities, store owners exchange information with each other, creating a blacklist which covers all of the questionable people in the community. Services at banks and other financial institutions can also be denied to people on a blacklist, as long as the organization can prove that the financial circumstances of the person in question are grounds for denial of servic
es.

jouliya
mimi cici
mimi cici

Number of posts : 399
Age : 34
Location : Algeria
Registration date : 2010-02-13

Back to top Go down

Back to top


 
Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum