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Discover LudwigThe phrase "charitable intervention" is correct and usable in written English.
It can be used when discussing actions taken to assist those in need, often in a humanitarian or philanthropic context.
Example: "The organization focused on charitable intervention to provide relief to the victims of the natural disaster."
Alternatives: "philanthropic action" or "humanitarian assistance."
Exact(1)
We need to aim to get rid of food banks altogether, and replace charitable intervention with a fairer, more equal society.
Similar(59)
There are already public, private and charitable interventions operating both in and outside of our jails, but payment by results could change the structure of the criminal justice system.
The Manifesto rejects charitable interventions, rescue and rehabilitation, which it sees as the typical tools of those who seek to abolish the sex industry, and instead calls for the respect of human rights and improvement of sex industry standards.
Although the programme does ask serious questions about the methods and ethics of charitable and aid intervention, the fact that Nick Hewer gets his name in the title while Sierra Leone doesn't is revealing of TV's change in priorities.
"Moving forward, the charity will encourage participants to its EuroFIT programme at Goodison Park, in addition to further awareness building, charitable drives and direct intervention to continue to help refugees in the city".
But no "charitable" (I hate that word) intervention can solve any of these issues.
The universities say that is a direct threat to their autonomy and that level of direct government intervention could mean they lose their charitable status or be redesignated as public bodies, rather than independent institutions.
The association ran a pilot scheme in Cumbria last year and is now recruiting four more officers, employed by its charitable arm, the Riverside Foundation, to focus on intensive intervention with younger tenants.
In the medium to long term, scaling up the use of social impact bonds to finance payment by results intervention programmes could unlock potentially £100m of ethical investment from charitable trusts.
Interventions for people with disabilities are mostly viewed as charitable, largely undertaken by NGOs.
Common models and solutions including charitable dentistry and volunteer-based dental clinics, which typically provide one-off, acute dental interventions (often extractions) are likely inadequate to respond to such complexities.
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CEO of Professional Science Editing for Scientists @ prosciediting.com