Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 22/08/2009

2009; Gale Group;

Autores

Ahmad Faruqui, Steven Hochman Assistant to President, Keith Lodge Chairman, Philip Roe, Robin Conway, Barry Edelson, Jim Mulligan, Peter Shire, Ian Gary Senior policy, Dan Harris,

Resumo

The Economist Hublot Contents The world this week Politics Business Losing Afghanistan? Out with the old Japan's election U, V or W for recovery World economy Keep it honest American health care Step forward, Dave the brave Britain's Conservatives Accenture Saving energy Presidential reputations The individual in society Distributing oil wealth Home truths Toilet humour The Economist Room for one more? Population debate Other highlights Online Contents Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus From insurgency to insurrection A war of necessity? American opinions on Afghanistan The man who would be prime minister An interview with David Cameron Healthier than thou Transatlantic rift over the NHS Tata takes charge Rebuilding Jaguar Land Rover Dumbing down: discuss A-level results Growing up banged up Children in prison The vanity of ideas International Business Machines Entering the Yugosphere Former Yugoslavia patches itself together The parties' tax tangle Germany's election Shoot the puppy! Dangerous dogs in Denmark Dear Viktor, you're dead, love Dmitry Russia and Ukraine The drain to Spain Spanish soccer Mercedes-Benz Growing apart? The euro-area economy The labours of Sisyphus Health reform Left behind Youth unemployment The 21 Club Drinking laws Benefits and the border The worst unemployment figures Still waiting Gay-marriage laws The prince of darkness Robert Novak Thanks be to DC Statewatch: Maryland Still crazy after all these years Hugo Chávez seeks to catch them young Venezuela's education "reforms" Correa's curriculum Ecuador's education reforms A very British coup The Turks and Caicos loses independence How to squander a nation's potential Libya and Muammar Qaddafi, 40 years on Bibi the happy juggler Israeli politics Lethal and relentless More bombings in Iraq Movement of jah people An Ethiopian singer freed Not guilty Zambia's corruption trial Railing against the wrong enemy Japan's election The political storm Taiwan's typhoon A glint of sunshine Kim Dae-jung and North Korea It never rains India's failing monsoon Different approaches Australia's relations with China Crime and punishment A murder in China Call a cab China's drink-driving crackdown Splashing, and clashing, in murky waters Piracy and private enterprise A long shadow The Lockerbie decision The game has changed Consumer goods in the recession Unsexy and unsuccessful Reader's Digest declares bankruptcy Copyrights and wrongs Publishing in Australia My other car firm's a Porsche Volkswagen and Porsche Talking and saving Competition comes to Mexican telecoms Landing rights Cathay Pacific, Air China and Citic Pacific Corks at dawn A row in the champagne industry Face value Bank to square one Friends, family and grandads too Where it all began America's housing market Spark of invention Housing derivatives Tight corners Monetary policy Late starter South Africa's economy Verdant? Carbon markets in China Fail-safe Reforming finance: Resolution regimes A plastic prop Payment cards and the poor Economics focus The unkindest cuts Pictet Hypodermic needless Better vaccinations How to stop an outbreak Influenza vaccination The dogs have had their day The smell of death Snap it, click it, use it Reading bar codes with mobile phones Mightier than the sword Political philosophy Facts are Subversive: Political Writing from a Decade Without a Name. By Timothy Garton Ash. Atlantic Books; 441 pages; £25 Gray's Anatomy: Selected Writings. By John Gray. Allen Lane; 481 pages; £20 Overdoing it American conservatism The Death of Conservatism. By Sam Tanenhaus. Random House; 144 pages; $17 The slide towards insecthood Brazilian literature Why This World: A Biography of Clarice Lispector. By Benjamin Moser. Oxford University Press; 496 pages; $29.95. Haus; £20 Prawns and other illegal aliens New film:"District 9" Spied from the inside The Tiananmen uprising Tiananmen Moon: Inside the Chinese Student Uprising of 1989. By Philip Cunningham. Rowman & Littlefield; 304 pages; $39.95 and £24.95 The man who changed rock music Les Paul Gayatri Devi Courses Appointments Courses Appointments Tenders Business & Personal Conferences Announcements Conferences Announcements Overview The Economist commodity-price index Output, prices and jobs The Economist commodity-price index Trade, exchange rates, budget balances and interest rates Share prices by industry Markets The Economist Zurich

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