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social action

noun

  1. individual or group behavior that involves interaction with other individuals or groups, especially organized action toward social reform.


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Word History and Origins

Origin of social action1

First recorded in 1850–55
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Example Sentences

In unsettled times, cultural change can become focused into an ideological contest, in which ideologies exert a powerful, clearly articulated but more restricted basis for social action.

From Salon

They laud social actions of the past and recognize the advances toward equality that previous generations made, often at risk of life and limb.

A deeply rooted approach to investing and social action is taking its lumps.

Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean and director of global social action at the Wiesenthal Center, encouraged Jews to observe the sabbath on Saturday.

“It will be very important that we really develop social action through music,” he said.

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social accountingSocial and Liberal Democratic Party