Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 14/03/2009

2009; Gale Group;

Autores

Shannon Holloway, Robert Sarver, Christoph Rosenberg Mission chief, Huguette Labelle, Gina Antczak, Erik Honda, Tony Allwright,

Resumo

The Economist Allianz Contents Oneworld CFA Institute The world this week Politics Business Zurich Vivendi The jobs crisis The better part of valour The London summit All very engaging Barack Obama's foreign policy Compounding the crime Sudan Cap and binge America and climate change Flybmi Just when you thought it was safe Northern Ireland UBS Shining some light We are all only human Latvia's economy A city on a hill Economist Inviting comment Economics Invest in France Agency Other highlights Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Lombard Odier Sins of emission Shadow of the past Northern Ireland Of banks and ballot boxes Political apathy All sins forgiven? Illegal immigrants Bahrain Shoulder to shoulder Condoning torture International Business Machines Preparing for austerity Public-services reform Lady in red Harriet Harman Good sport State-owned banking Swiss How to restart the engine? The state and the economy: Germany Back in the driving seat The state and the economy: France Silvio, the actress and the law Italian justice Not just an American horror School killings in Germany Repairing the bridge Turkish foreign policy A glimpse of daylight Ruthenia Carbontrust Beware of breaking the single market Pursued by Obamabears The economy A new era of integrity, sort of Science and the president The teacher-in-chief speaks Barack Obama and education Saving lives and money The death penalty Don't expect a revolution Africa policy The final reel 3D viewers Fire in the hole Pennsylvania's burning mines Hoping for a silver lining The border Le vieux canard A nation divided El Salvador's presidential election Feeding frenzy Socialism in Venezuela The justice of crowds Bolivia Sky Team Don't look back History in Peru Soaps, sex and sociology Television in Brazil Next machetes, then machineguns? Kenya A double strike Nigeria's economy The Big Yam Lagos Shaik, rattle and release South Africa Try to avoid embarrassment again Arab diplomacy and the Palestinians On the trail with a megastar India's election Bartered brides Kidnapping Hmong women in Vietnam Unencumbered incumbent Indonesia's parliamentary election Naked aggression China and America spar at sea More questions than answers A missing Thai human-rights lawyer Sound and fury North Korea The Dutch model Afghanistan's Uruzgan province The toxins trickle downwards The global crisis and the poor Dancing with despots Banks, graft and development And now for a nuclear remake Russia and America In from the cold? Unions Merck's manoeuvres Pharmaceuticals The next Great Wall Business in Asia Flying the flag Patriotic purchasing Losing its bearings Continental and Schaeffler Trend Micro Hello, girls Marketing to women Face value The long and the short When jobs disappear Talking-shop-on-Thames The G20 Inadequate Regulating banks Got a light? China's stimulus Buttonwood The bear necessities Unsavoury spread Credit markets The next domino? Global insurance Going down quietly The Madoff affair Economics focus A Plan B for global finance Batteries now included Electric vehicles Historical determinism Climatology A sinking feeling Climate change What's the score? Twenty years of the world wide web From beyond the grave The Warsaw ghetto Who Will Write our History? Rediscovering a Hidden Archive from the Warsaw Ghetto. By Samuel D. Kassow. Vintage; 522 pages; $16.95. Allen Lane; £10.99 Voice of disenchantment Foreign aid Dead Aid: Why Aid is Not Working and How There is Another Way for Africa. By Dambisa Moyo. Farrar, Straus and Giroux; 208 pages; $24. Allen Lane; £14.99 Reluctant warriors Fighting insurgencies The Gamble: General David Petraeus and the American Military Adventure in Iraq, 2006-2008. By Thomas E. Ricks. Penguin; 400 pages; $27.95. Allen Lane; £25 The Accidental Guerrilla: Fighting Small Wars in the Midst of a Big One. By David Kilcullen. Oxford University Press; 384 pages; $27.95. To be published in Britain by Hurst in April Buttoned up 20th-century American writing Cheever: A Life. By Blake Bailey. Knopf; 784 pages; $35 Empire dreams London Hackney, That Rose-Red Empire: A Confidential Report. By Iain Sinclair. Hamish Hamilton; 581 pages; £20 Apples and oranges The influence of Cézanne Alan Landers Courses Courses Courses Courses Courses Courses Courses Courses Courses Appointments Appointments Appointments Property Business & Personal Announcements Overview Labour productivity Output, prices and jobs The Economist commodity-price index Trade, exchange rates, budget balances and interest rates The cost of living Markets Swiss: finance: institute Financial Times Ram Charan HSBC Private Bank The Economist Global Entrepreneur Programme Also in this section Economist Global heroes All in the mind A different breed of manager An idea whose time has come Entrepreneurialism has become cool Vodafone The United States of Entrepreneurs America still leads the world The more the merrier India and China are creating millions of entrepreneurs Warwick Business School Cambridge Lands of opportunity Israel, Denmark and Singapore show how entrepreneurialism can thrive in different climates Magic formula The secrets of entrepreneurial success IESE Business School IMD International Saving the world Entrepreneurs are trying to do good as well as make money The entrepreneurial society Better, on the whole, than managed capitalism Economist Economist Intelligence Unit

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