However, deaf people are worried that the Reverse Window system could ghettoise them in the cinema.
From the newscientist.com
And do we really have to ghettoise the unemployed anyway?
From the guardian.co.uk
Pornographers worry it will ghettoise their sites.
From the au.news.yahoo.com
But the language is designed to ghettoise Labour in a long-dead era when interventionist policies came close to wrecking the economy.
From the nzherald.co.nz
Yet it seems to me that too many of us are choosing to ghettoise ourselves by not venturing outside our ethnic and artistic comfort zone.
From the thisislondon.co.uk
Driving people out of their homes will ghettoise the city and put intolerable strain on a range of overburdened local services in outer London and beyond.
From the guardian.co.uk
But the effect is that you ghettoise the disabled, by making out that they're so different from everyone else that only a disabled person could play a disabled person.
From the guardian.co.uk
But now that we have learned, the hard way, about the lethal perils of the wrong kind of multiculturalism, who in their right mind actively seeks to ghettoise the next generation from infancy?
From the guardian.co.uk
More examples
Ghettoize: put in a ghetto; "The Jews in Eastern Europe were ghettoized"
Ghetto was originally used in Venice to describe the area where Jews were compelled to live. A ghetto is now described as an overcrowded urban area often associated with a specific ethnic or racial population; especially because of social, legal, or economic pressure.