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    • Compensation for injuries sustained

      • Redress Compensation for injuries sustained; recovery or restitution for harm or injury; damages or equitable relief.
      legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com › redress
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  2. Redress. Compensation for injuries sustained; recovery or restitution for harm or injury; damages or equitable relief. Access to the courts to gain Reparation for a wrong. West's Encyclopedia of American Law, edition 2. Copyright 2008 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved. REDRESS.

  3. A method or course of action used to find a solution or rectify an issue. Payment rendered as a way of making amends for a loss or wrongdoing. How to use "redress" in a sentence. The court decided to grant redress to the plaintiffs for their suffering. Redress is often sought by individuals who feel they have been wrongfully treated.

  4. Redress means to set right, relief or remedy or a means of seeking relief or remedy. It can be putting right a wrong by compensation or compensation for injuries sustained; recovery or restitution for harm or injury; damages or equitable relief.

  5. Definition & Citations: The receiving satisfaction for an injury sustained. Find the legal definition of REDRESS from Black's Law Dictionary, 2nd Edition.

  6. a (1) : to set right : remedy. looked to charity, not to legislation, to redress social wrongs W. R. Inge. (2) : to make up for : compensate. b. : to remove the cause of (a grievance or complaint) c. : to exact reparation for : avenge. 2. archaic. : to requite (a person) for a wrong or loss. b. : heal. redresser noun. 2 of 2.

  7. When analyzing the redressability element of standing, the Supreme Court has focused on the specific relief requested by the plaintiff in its complaint and considered whether granting that relief would redress the injury alleged.

  8. relief. The redress or assistance that a party seeks from a court. Essentially synonymous with remedy, but sometimes meant to convey a broader concept. Whereas a remedy typically redresses obvious injuries, the term relief better captures situations where no tangible injury exists and yet one party seeks a court order to protect its legal ...

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