emancipate - significado y definición. Qué es emancipate
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Qué (quién) es emancipate - definición

EFFORT TO PROCURE ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL RIGHTS, POLITICAL RIGHTS OR EQUALITY
Emancipated; Human emancipation; Emancipator; Emancipate; Political emancipation; Emancipatory

emancipate         
v. (D; tr.) to emancipate from (to emancipate serfs from bondage)
emancipate         
v. a.
Enfranchise, manumit, liberate, disenthrall, release, unfetter, unshackle, unchain, free, set free, set at liberty.
emancipate         
(emancipates, emancipating, emancipated)
If people are emancipated, they are freed from unpleasant or unfair social, political, or legal restrictions. (FORMAL)
Catholics were emancipated in 1792...
That war preserved the Union and emancipated the slaves...
...the newly emancipated state...
= liberate
VERB: be V-ed, V n, V-ed
emancipation
...the emancipation of women.
N-UNCOUNT: oft N of n

Wikipedia

Emancipation

Emancipation generally means to free a person from a previous restraint or legal disability. More broadly, it is also used for efforts to procure economic and social rights, political rights or equality, often for a specifically disenfranchised group, or more generally, in discussion of many matters.

Among others, Karl Marx discussed political emancipation in his 1844 essay "On the Jewish Question", although often in addition to (or in contrast with) the term human emancipation. Marx's views of political emancipation in this work were summarized by one writer as entailing "equal status of individual citizens in relation to the state, equality before the law, regardless of religion, property, or other 'private' characteristics of individual people."

"Political emancipation" as a phrase is less common in modern usage, especially outside academic, foreign or activist contexts. However, similar concepts may be referred to by other terms. For instance, in the United States the Civil Rights movement culminated in the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Voting Rights Act of 1965, and the Fair Housing Act of 1968, which can collectively be seen as further realization of events such as the Emancipation Proclamation and the abolition of slavery a century earlier. In the current and former British West Indies islands the holiday Emancipation Day is celebrated to mark the end of the Atlantic slave trade.

Ejemplos de uso de emancipate
1. Our emancipation will in turn serve to emancipate the world.
2. It is not a good way to integrate and emancipate Muslim women.
3. In Pakistan awareness is growing about the need to emancipate the women.
4. It was in 1''0 that Merkel finally began to ‘emancipate‘ herself from her father, Langguth says.
5. Eighty years ago, King Amanullah Khan of Afghanistan embarked on a series of radical reforms, highlighted by his move to emancipate women.