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: --
Government, in the process of winding itself back, is remedial and interventionist.
Some related research has appeared recently which seems to accept a similar general framework, but instead takes a more interventionist approach.
Finally, the expertise of the operators, and the good teamwork between echocardiographer and interventionist, are major factors for successful closure.
What were previously sunrise industries may become sunset industries, calling into play interventionist mechanisms that were not present before.
This is an alternative measure of preferences in the electorate for interventionist economic policies in general and generous social insurance policies more specifically.
Its provision is characterised by universal and comparatively generous benefits, a commitment to full employment and income protection, and a strongly interventionist state.
In social policy terms, the rise of 'welfarism' in western capitalism saw the boundary redrawn towards an expanded (and more interventionist) public realm.
Then preferences are serially updated based on more recent historical experience with broadly interventionist or liberal policy regimes.