Reformist
Reformist is a term used to describe a person who seeks to reform or improve a political, social, religious, or institutional system by gradual, non-revolutionary means within existing structures. The word can function as an adjective (reformist policy, reformist approach) or as a noun (a reformist). In political contexts, reformists advocate changes through legal channels, elections, policy debates, and reform within institutions rather than overthrow of the system. They often emphasize incremental change, consensus-building, and the protection of stability while expanding rights, accountability, or efficiency.
Religious and ideological contexts also use reformist to describe currents aiming to reinterpret or modernize doctrines
Reformists are sometimes contrasted with radicals or revolutionaries who seek rapid, fundamental change through upheaval, or
Critics argue that reformism can be slow, incremental, and limited by existing power structures, while supporters
Historical and contemporary examples include liberal reformers working within constitutional systems, social-democratic or progressive movements, seeking