0 the practice of refusing to get involved in a situation, especially in a disagreement between countries or within a country: --
a policy of non-intervention
It is not my intention to discuss the whole question of non-intervention but the narrow question of the withdrawal of so-called volunteers.
There should be an attempt to make a reality of non-intervention.
Well, we have had some experience in this non-intervention business.
An analysis of variance demonstrated no significant differences by patient age in the frequency of citations of health-care system constraints for non-intervention (0.75 for midlife and 1.00 for older patients).
However, drawing on a continental understanding of sovereignty that emphasises both non-intervention and representative government, the regional body started monitoring elections in member states before any other organisation worldwide.
It was hypothesised that in consultations with older patients many citations of this reason for non-intervention would evince age-based rationing, so the number of mentioned health-care system constraints was counted.
Evaluation requires f ollowing an intervention (screened) population and a non-intervention (unscreened) population to assess the impact of screening on mortality.
Such non-intervention both reflects and reinforces member-state sovereignty.