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But Connecticut is taking a more interventionist role, experts say.
The constitution of 1976 confirmed the large and interventionist role of the state in the economy.
Farrell was noted as a liberal who believed in an "active, interventionist role for government."
France also had an interventionist role in northeastern Asia throughout the second half of the 19th century.
The arbitrator must conduct the hearing according to the circumstances of each case and will in the future be required to adopt an interventionist role.
Would the U.S. government consider such an interventionist role?
Marian welcomes the more interventionist role available to the Court under the new Act which has only been in force since October 1991.
The State carved out an economically interventionist role for itself while, at the same time, repressing working-class movements and leftist republicans.
Reagan had within his administrations a coterie of moralists, mostly in the second and third tier, who advocated an interventionist role for America.
To achieve these goals usually entails a much higher degree of centralization and a much more interventionist role for the government in focusing national resources.
Labour's proposed interventionist role for the DTI sounded depressingly familiar.
Currently, the Finance Ministry plays a highly interventionist role, sometimes orchestrating mergers and rescues of institutions.
"It steers the middle course between an isolationist, unilateralist course, on the one hand, and world policeman, highly interventionist role, on the other."
Face to face with rural women: CWDS' search for new knowledge and an interventionist role.
Individuals who conceive of an authoritative God and a benevolent God both see God as taking an interventionist role in believers lives.
In Southern Africa, the major regional power, South Africa, has also played a highly interventionist role in neighbouring countries.
That advocacy echoed the lusty assertiveness of his early years, as Labor Secretary, when the Federal Government played an interventionist role in some labor-management matters.
In the early 20th century, many governments were taking a more interventionist role in the economy, foreshadowing the influence of economists like John Maynard Keynes.
It is now widely accepted that since the era of competitive liberal capitalism, fundamental changes have taken place, particularly as regards the increasingly interventionist role of the state.
But even before Asia, two other debt crises, one domestic and one international, drew the American Government into an interventionist role, using public money to bail out investors.
Even if the Council assumes a more interventionist role than the Charter language appears to contemplate, the United States has nothing to fear from the United Nations.
Kennan believed that it was necessary to permit the Japanese greater freedom and that the interventionist role of SCAP should be reduced.
Equally important is the teacher's interventionist role in creating the learning environment, initiating the experiences and providing skills teaching as appropriate in accordance with the stage of development of the individual.
The government wanted the SRA to take a more interventionist role with Railtrack and its successor Network Rail, but never gave it the legal powers to do so.
Even by the end of the 1920s there were the beginnings of calls for a more directly interventionist role by government and some deliberate trade and industrial policy for the future.