0 (of a government or their actions) often becoming involved, either in the problems of another country, or in the economy of one's own country:
1 becoming involved in influencing a country's economy:
2 someone who believes in becoming involved in influencing a country's economy:
A precondition for the plan's success is therefore the use of interventionist techniques of economic management.
He defines the heterogeneous products as interventionist products that protect defined interests and/or supersede voluntary transactions.
Controlled interventionist experimentation could help to move beyond the "wanderings through the scholastic maze" that traditional zoology had brought.
One source of motivation can be traced to the persistence of an interventionist agenda within the policy community.
The latter will put collective considerations before individual autonomy, ready to adopt more ruthlessly interventionist strategies even if this means infringing personal liberty.
By and large policies regarding the family were less interventionist and more conservative than programmatic statements would have led one to expect.
This is the most interventionist of the archetypes because we are aware of the continuing imposition of gesture.
Then preferences are serially updated based on more recent historical experience with broadly interventionist or liberal policy regimes.