0 present participle of reform --
1 to make an improvement, especially by changing a person's behaviour or the structure of something: --
In these moments he allowed hard-nosed political realism to soften reforming zealotry.
For this reason, my results suggest that calls for reforming (or doing away with) citizen juries are premature.
One attractive position to take was to embrace the student initiative for reforming the constitution.
Reforming insolvent government banks has proved to be very difficult.
The reforming conductor's efforts were in vain; thus 'rue', an old-fashioned literary word for regret.
Few countries will be able to avoid reforming their public-pensions system, and those reforms will almost inevitably have redistributional consequences.
Other reforming countries have used direct worker or employer control to decentralize, enhance competition, and align decision-making with those whose interests are at stake.
In reforming pensions, redistributional aspects are important to maintain standards of living in old age, and the state has the democratic authority to accomplish this.