Re-form Biography

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Re-form Biography

Biography Re-form

Reform means to change, usually a reversion to what is perceived to be a pure original state. It has been used for any change thought to be positive, however.Reform can refer to:In politics:
  • Reform movement, a generic term for various social and political movements.
    • Reform Movement , a list of specific organizations known as the Reform Movement.
  • Non-reformist Reform, reform which is attentive to immediate social needs and at the same time moves toward further gains, and eventually, wholesale transformation.
  • 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 , 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:
  • Protestant Reformation
    • Reform , an evangelical organisation within the Anglican Church.
    • Wesleyan Reform Union, an independent group of Methodists in the United Kingdom.
  • Counter-Reformation
  • Reform Judaism, a major denomination of Judaism with principles influenced by the Enlightenment.
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:
  • Reform, Alabama, a town in western Alabama.
  • In Japan, "reform" is a wasei-eigo term referring to renovation.

See also

  • Reformation
Reform


Source: http://.wikipedia.org/wiki/Re-Form
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Re-form Biography