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bad faith
noun
- lack of honesty and trust:
Bad faith on the part of both negotiators doomed the talks from the outset.
bad faith
noun
- intention to deceive; treachery or dishonesty (esp in the phrase in bad faith )
- Also calledmauvaise foi (in the philosophy of the 20th-century French philosopher Jean-Paul Sartre) self-deception, as when an agent regards his actions as conditioned by circumstances or conventions in order to evade his own responsibility for choosing them freely
Other Words From
- bad-faith adjective
Example Sentences
University officials disputed the union’s allegations, saying in a statement that “we fundamentally disagree with AFSCME’s claims of bad faith bargaining and characterization of unacceptable bargaining proposals.”
Union members authorized the strike with 99% of members voting in support just weeks after filing formal charges with the state’s Public Employment Relations Board alleging bad faith bargaining.
A union representing nearly 40,000 University of California workers began a two-day strike Wednesday to protest what it claims is bad faith bargaining by university negotiators as the two sides try to hammer out new labor agreements.
Rothchild notes that a bad faith conflation of antisemitism and anti-Zionism, or a reluctance to criticize actions of the State of Israel even when they violate international law, has led to a culture of silence and fear within the medical community.
It also redefines harassment as “a landlord’s bad faith conduct” directed at tenants that causes them detriment or harm.
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