In the US, any public protest is legal, as long as you apply for the appropriate permits for lawful public assembly.
Discrimination in any form is discrimination. Individual discrimination is discrimination of one person against a group. Institutional discrimination would be a institution totally and wholly discriminating against a group or sect.
If you obtain the right permits for assembly, it's perfectly legal. Hate groups hold protests all the time, and you'd be no different.
remonstrating
which group suggested that all American trade with Britain be stopped as a way of protesting the intolerable Acts
Group Against Racial Discrimination - Fiji - was created in 1990.
Discrimination faced by one identity group is the same as discrimination faced by another because it is often based on the same thing --- intolerance.
Collective discrimination is the prejudicial treatment of all members of a group. This in turns influences the behavior towards group members.
Prejudice: Hatred towards a race, group, or religion Discrimination: Unfair treatment of a race, group, or religion
indirect discrimination is caused when you are wanted from a particular group or even religion
Answer this question… Gender discrimination
group of people who are protesting about something outside a building, especially a group of workers who are on strike and are encouraging other workers not to work.
An example of direct institutional discrimination would be a school denying admission to students of a certain race, religion, or gender, even though they meet all the academic requirements. This type of discrimination is enforced through policies or practices within the institution itself.