News from 03/01/2009
2009; Gale Group;
Autores
Poul Nyrup Rasmussen President, Huw Sayer, Tito Alvarado, Andrea Matranga, Daniel Anderson, Andrew Ryder, Bill Fridl, James Smith Chief executive,
ResumoThe Economist Repsol Contents Subscription service The world this week BAE Systems Gaza: the rights and wrongs Testing times The euro at ten Time for a (long overdue) change Fifty years of the Castro regime A sea of troubles The oceans Managing the Facebookers Business Bang & Olufsen Justice in Sudan Anatomy of a genocide A new deal? Muslims in Europe Don't dial and drive History lesson A true artist Cheek to cheek The Economist A dictator departs The archive Invest in France Agency Other highlights Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Heroic myth and prosaic failure Ill winds Cuba's economy Shopped out Retailing gloom Will he, won't he? Election speculation A surprising conversion High-speed rail The unkindest cut Crime statistics The National Autistic Society IAA Uncle Volodya's flagging Christmas spirit Russian From heroic to farcical Ukraine's government Television diplomacy Turkey and the Kurds Longer dole queues Spain's unemployment Deployment days Kosovo and Serbia Conversion rate Christians in Kosovo The people puzzle Re-training America's workers Subject: Wall Street Barack Obama's Blackberry A safety net in need of repair Unemployment insurance Hunting without guns The Christmas bird count A turn in the South Charleston Obamaville Re-naming America Huntington's clash Socialism with cheap oil Venezuela Hanging them high The Caribbean Pummelling the Palestinians Israel and Gaza What can we do? Gaza and Hamas Proportional to what? The laws of war After the dictator, the deluge Guinea The tenacity of hope Bangladesh's election A good vote in the angry valley India, Pakistan and Kashmir Shadow movement Turkmenistan Go for big chests and slim waists Horse racing in China Don't bring me your huddled masses Japanese immigration The future is another country Higher education The Americans are coming Internationalising American universities Out of pocket European bankruptcy laws No end to the nightmare America's car industry Rising in the East Research and development Generation Y goes to work Management The Rypple effect Performance management Face value The other transition Demonstrably durable Needed: a strategy Banking in China Buttonwood Ready for a rally? A slice of Danish Fixing finance Follow the feeders The Madoff scandal Return to wealth Bank strategy Economics focus Diagnosing depression International bright young things Allianz Easy as 1,2, 3 Numbers When 1,2, 3. . . is not enough More numbers The lantern on the stern America and the Middle East Reading Lolita again Memoir of Iran Things I've Been Silent About: Memories.By Azar Nafisi. Random House; 336 pages; $27. To be published in Britain by William Heinemann in April Headless story Oliver Cromwell Cromwell's Head. By Jonathan Fitzgibbons. The National Archives; 238 pages; $22.95 and £ 12.99 Greying globe Demographics The Age of Aging: How Demographics are Changing the Global Economy and Our World. By George Magnus. John Wiley; 256 pages; $29.95 and £ 17.99 Scholar of stitching The Metropolitan Museum of Art Prickly charmers Hedgehogs The Hedgehog's Dilemma: A Tale of Obsession, Nostalgia, and the World's most Charming Mammal. By Hugh Warwick. Bloomsbury; 276 pages; $25. Published in Britain as " A Prickly Affair: My Life with Hedgehogs"; Allen Lane; £ 14.99 Harold Pinter Courses Courses Tenders Courses Appointments Appointments Tenders Business & Personal Tenders Courses Overview Unemployment rates Output, prices and jobs The Economist commodity-price index Trade, exchange rates, budget balances and interest rates South Korea Markets The Economist Dell The Economist Warwick Business School Imperial College London Business School Troubled waters The sea is suffering, mostly at the hand of man, says John Grimond Scramble for the seabed The latest land-grab is under water and under way The curse of carbon A meltdown tinged with acid More abused than used But the sea can be harnessed for energy, and to store carbon Plenty more fish in the sea? No longer: technology has made the elusive and inexhaustible into easy prey Come, friends, and plough the sea But make sure farmed fish are veggies Grabbing it all In most places fisheries policies have failed completely An Icelandic success A model way to catch and keep fish Saline solutions The sea needs research, management, property rights—and political action The Economist Future special reports
Referência(s)