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Look up reform in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.

Reform means to change, possibly a reversion to what is perceived to be a pure original state. It is used, however, for any change thought to be positive.

Reform is generally distinguished from revolution. The latter moves toward basic or radical change; whereas reform may be no more than fine tuning, or at most redressing serious wrongs without altering the fundamentals of the system. Reform seeks to improve the system as it stands, never to overthrow it wholesale.

During the Philadelphia Convention of 1787, for example, the New Jersey Plan would have reformed the existing constitution, the Articles of Confederation. By contrast, the Virginia Plan proposed to completely rewrite the nation\'s fundamental charter, and create a new constitution. Virginia\'s more revolutionary approach prevailed and resulted in the U.S. Constitution.

Likewise today, many reforms are proposed in the United States Congress which aim to improve the system. For example, Campaign finance reform would modify the way elections in the United States are financed, but would not change the basic nature of the offices at stake. Rotation in office or Term limits would, by contrast, be more revolutionary, in altering basic political connections between incumbents and constituents.On term limits reform see, U.S. Term Limits. On more radical/revolutionary changes, including term limits, see, for example, Robert Struble, Jr., Treatise on Twelve Lights: To Restore America the Beautiful under God and the Written Constitution,2007-08 edition.

Reform can refer to:

In politics:

  • Reform movement, a generic term for various social and political movements.
  • Non-reformist Reform, reform which is attentive to immediate social needs and at the same time moves toward further gains, and eventually, wholesale transformation.[citation needed]
  • Reform Party, a list of parties calling themselves the Reform Party or variants thereof.
  • Reform Act, a common name for electoral-reform bills in the United Kingdom; they are usually differentiated by their year.
  • Reform (think tank), a think-tank in the United Kingdom that promotes deregulation, competition in UK public services, and a low-tax economy.
  • Reforming Movement, a French centrist political group created in 1972.
  • La Reforma, a period of liberal reforms in Mexico after 1855.

In religion:


In chemistry:

  • Catalytic reforming, a process that converts the hydrocarbons in various oil refinery naphthas into higher octane hydrocarbons for use as components of gasoline.
  • Steam reforming, also called hydrogen reforming or catalytic oxidation, a method of producing hydrogen from hydrocarbons

Reform can also refer to:

Endnotes

See also

This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from Wikipedia


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