Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 07/03/2009

2009; Gale Group;

Autores

Gregory Blain, Harry Whitbread, Sally Muggeridge Chief executive, Jan Fidrmuc Senior lecturer, David Rice, Miroslav Singer Vice-governor, Jarko Fidrmuc Professor, A F Bradley, Cheol Kyu Park,

Resumo

The Economist Boeing Monsanto imagine Contents Igindex. co. uk Shell The world this week Politics Business Mandarin Oriental the Hotel Group Accenture Hublot How to stop the drug wars Horror in Lahore Terrorism in Pakistan Take them home responsibly America and Iraq Wishful, and dangerous, thinking Barack Obama's budget A warrant for Bashir International justice The illusion of clean coal Climate change Scapegoat millionaire Bankers UBS South Korea's debt The Czech economy Language and trade Blissfully unaware A liberal president It pays to be polite Economist The long and short of it Blogs Other highlights Germany Trade & Invest Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus On the trail of the traffickers Sniffy customers The cocaine business A toker's guide Levels of prohibition In America, lessons learned Drug education Vivendi Now for something completely different Monetary policy The go-between State-owned banks Emerson Getting it together London's mayor Sorry, that's personal Protecting medical data Last orders Scotland's drinking crackdown The odd couple The enduring popularity of Recep Tayyip Erdogan Turkey A new landscape Spain and its regions Elitism rules Ok Top jobs in France Back to the farm France and agriculture Extremist nightmares Zurich Carbon Trust The view from West Virginia Barack Obama's health reforms Whom the cap fits The budget and the environment Dust to dust Water in California Many a mickle Dollar stores The outsiders Illinois politics Diversionary tactics Louisiana Reaping the whirlwind Statewatch: New York Anger management Reaping the rewards of indolence Brazil's economy The other Castro stamps his heel Cuba An unmended fence Colombia and Ecuador All charm and smiles Hillary Clinton in the Middle East A jungle alliance that may just endure Congo and Rwanda Whose land? Zimbabwe's farms Steady but stale Algeria Trading danger for captivity War in Sri Lanka State of denial Terrorism in Pakistan Bad or mad? Bangladesh after the rebellion Better than the alternative Afghanistan's presidential elections Road blocks Afghanistan's northern neighbours A bruiser bruised Japan's opposition In need of some snake-blood Vietnam's economy Cantonfair Yes, prime minister The state of the Chinese nation Braced for the aftershock The worst crimes, the law and the UN Security Council Boom in the bust Mobile telecoms in the recession Priming the pipe The boom in mobile broadband No Opel, no hope The crisis in the car industry Sui Genesis Hyundai's surprising success So much for capitalism Business in China In the pink Barbie at 50 Face value Game on Trouble in store Hiscox Slash and burn Stockmarkets and dividends Rebalancing act Japan's economy Household chores HSBC's rights issue Buttonwood The grand illusion Beating the rush Euro-zone government bonds Burning down the house Corporate bankruptcy Bridges to somewhere India's economy Economics focus Give me your scientists. . . The bees are back in town Agriculture About face Physiognomy and economics The Economist Haunted by the past Vanishing twins I'm not looking, honest! Physics and philosophy Bearing all The fall of Bear Stearns House of Cards: A Table of Hubris and Wretched Excess on Wall Street. By William D. Cohan. Doubleday; 480 pages; $27.95. Allen Lane; £25 Misunderstood moderate Raúl Prebisch The Life and Times of Raúl Prebisch, 1901-1986. By Edgar J. Dosman. McGill-Queen's University Press; 624 pages; $49.95 and £38 Only obeying orders Iraq under Saddam The Weight of a Mustard Seed: The Intimate Story of an Iraqi General and His Family During Thirty Years of Tyranny. By Wendell Steavenson. Collins; 304 pages; $24.99. Atlantic Books; £14.99 Pretty in Paris French history Dancing to the Precipice: Lucie de la Tour du Pin and the French Revolution. By Caroline Moorehead. Chatto & Windus; 496 pages; £20. To be published in America by Harper in June Pauline Bonaparte: Venus of Empire. By Flora Fraser. Knopf; 304 pages; $28.95. To be published in Britain as "Venus of Empire" by John Murray in May Patterns of evolution Natural history Shapes: Nature's Patterns—A Tapestry in Three Parts. By Philip Ball. Oxford University Press; 320 pages; £14.99. To be published in America by Oxford University Press in April Caveat venditor The Yves Saint Laurent sale Conchita Cintrón Courses Courses Courses Courses Courses Courses Courses Appointments Appointments Appointments Appointments Property Tenders Appointments Business & Personal Overview The Economist poll of forecasters, March averages Output, prices and jobs The Economist commodity-price index Trade, exchange rates, budget balances and interest rates Market performance Markets Economist Intelligence Unit Oracle The Economist Philips Contents Shifting gears Recharged Fuelled by coffee Party time! Bone in a bottle A mousetrap for bacteria Bouncing ideas around Trend Micro Twinkle, twinkle, little laser A good yarn Revolutionary buildings Fair comment Bright sparks Serious fun Just click to park Adaptor die Scrubbing the skies The rhythm of life Machines that can see Model behaviour The internet's librarian Chartered Institute of Management Accountants

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