redress the situation• If this happens, it is then impossible to redress the situation.• They wanted something to be done, quickly, to redress the situation.• Any attempt to redress the situationbackfired.• But little could be done to redress the situation since the houses were in just as bad a position as the growers.
redress• Unless there is any redress to this distortion, the marginalproducts of labour will not be equal.• We were wrong to look for redress from others when we should be taking the wrong done to our master upon ourselves.• Because of the limitedliability of shareholders, creditors had no redress.• We had no one to speak for us, we had no redress.• The families of the victimschose to pursue the action because it was the only form of redress open to them.• The courts provide the means of redress for victims of crime.• Equally, you may have a right of redress if you are dismissed for failure to comply with an unjust order.• It is normal to restrict both the amounts involved and the timescale for seekingredress.• One remains a slave for as long as one still addresses the master and seeks redress from the master.