exclusionism

ex·clu·sion·ist

 (ĭk-sklo͞o′zhə-nĭst)
n.
One that advocates the exclusion of another or others, as from having or exercising a right or privilege.

ex·clu′sion·ism n.
ex·clu′sion·ist, ex·clu′sion·is′tic adj.
American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fifth Edition. Copyright © 2016 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing Company. All rights reserved.

ex•clu•sion•ism

(ɪkˈsklu ʒəˌnɪz əm)

n.
the principle or policy of exclusion, as from rights.
[1840–50]
ex•clu′sion•ist, n., adj.
Random House Kernerman Webster's College Dictionary, © 2010 K Dictionaries Ltd. Copyright 2005, 1997, 1991 by Random House, Inc. All rights reserved.

exclusionism

the doctrine or practice of excluding certain groups or individuals from enjoyment of certain rights or privileges. — exclusionist, n.
See also: Society
-Ologies & -Isms. Copyright 2008 The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.
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References in periodicals archive ?
Campaigning subtle exclusionism: The effects of right-wing populist positive ads on attitudes toward foreigners in Austria.
Al-Issa stressed that terrorism must be tracked in the cyberspace, adding that people of different faiths and cultures should resist exclusionism and hate theories, such as Islamophobia, which is currently considered the most difficult hurdle against the efforts of fighting extremism and positive integration of Muslim minorities.
If they do so, they will find that the future is in pluralism and not in feudal savagery of exclusionism.
Was their racial exclusionism controversial among members, or accepted as a foundation for white superiority and the "wages of whiteness"?
They saw themselves as free because they had so fully internalized the values of Jesuit education that they could not conceive of not wanting to defend their people, their religion, and their language." The Nemnis, who have had their experience of fanaticism and exclusionism when growing up as Jews in Egypt and then as embattled federalist Trudeauites in Quebecois universities during the referendum debates, appreciate the damage that can be wrought by such institutions and the cultures that nurture them.
Assimilationism, segregationism, and exclusionism were more strongly endorsed for devalued than for valued immigrants.
(15) And when Jane Eisner decries Islam for failing to "master modernity," she presumes a truly modern religion would be a "nonsectarian belief in the freedom of the individual to think, speak, and act in his or her best interests." (16) Fish's rejoinder to Eisner is that "She is not, as she would have it, defending all beliefs against an intolerant exclusionism but attacking belief in general, at least as it commits you to the truth of a conviction or the imperative of an action.
Noting that "materialism, eclecticism, and cosmopolitanism" were "related vices in d'Indy's right-wing ideology," Huebner admits this explanation is "unconvincing"; "[p]rotectionism and validation of national heritage did not necessarily mean exclusionism" for Saint-Saens (ibid.).
Her idea of the utopian impulse is that of a driving urge to confront and overturn exclusionism. The exploration of the driving concept of "I" and her struggle to place utopias within a space parallels the examination of where feminist theory, critical race theory, and social transition fit within both history and utopian logic.
Women Of Color In Contemporary Canadian Literature (1994), an anthology of writings edited by Makeda Silvera, deals with the idea of exclusionism in the publishing and cult ural industry.