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syrjintää

Syrjintää is the Finnish term for discrimination, defined as the unfair or unequal treatment of individuals or groups based on characteristics such as gender, ethnicity, religion, disability, or age. It can occur in various areas of life, including employment, education, housing, public services, and social interactions. Discrimination may be intentional or the result of policies, practices, or structural factors that disadvantage certain groups.

Discrimination can take several forms. Direct discrimination occurs when someone is treated less favorably specifically because

Legal framework and enforcement: Many countries prohibit syrjintää through anti-discrimination or equality laws. In Finland, the

Measurement and impact: Social science research uses surveys, audits, and field experiments to study the prevalence

See also: Discrimination; Equality; Human rights; Anti-discrimination law; Social inclusion.

of
a
protected
characteristic.
Indirect
discrimination
happens
when
a
neutral
rule
or
criterion
disproportionately
affects
a
protected
group.
Structural
or
systemic
discrimination
refers
to
embedded
practices
in
institutions
that
produce
unequal
outcomes,
often
without
explicit
bias.
Harassment
and
victimisation
are
related
phenomena
that
create
a
hostile
environment
or
penalize
individuals
for
asserting
their
rights.
Equality
Act
prohibits
discrimination
on
grounds
including
gender,
ethnicity,
religion
or
belief,
disability,
sexual
orientation,
gender
identity,
age,
family
status,
and
language,
with
remedies
and
complaint
mechanisms.
International
and
regional
instruments,
such
as
human
rights
treaties
and
EU
directives,
provide
standards
and
enforcement
mechanisms
against
discrimination.
and
patterns
of
syrjintää.
Discrimination
can
affect
earnings,
employment
opportunities,
education
access,
health,
and
social
participation,
and
it
can
undermine
trust
in
institutions
and
social
cohesion.