Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 17/10/2009

2009; Gale Group;

Autores

Paul Tighe, Jonathan Allum Japan strategist, Philip Bowring Former editor, William Burke, Joerg Baldauf, David Pugh, James Leape Director general,

Resumo

The Economist Chevron Malaysia International Islamic Financial Centre Contents Syngenta Renault The World this week Politics Business Mandarin Oriental the Hotel Group Georgia Battle of the clouds Obama's war The war in Afghanistan Winners and losers Sri Lanka's interned Tamils What a waste American health care Lessons of the lat Currencies EDF Bad policy will boil the planet Climate change The Royal Thai Government ExxonMobil Preparing for Copenhagen The Peninsula Shanghai Something to Feer Bears are not kept in cages Debating the bomb Lessons for Detroit Election briefing A splendid splenetic speech The Economist Virgin atlantic Down Mexico Business in Brazil and Mexico Covidien Other highlights The Economist Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Sungard Obama's faltering war Tackling the other Taliban Pakistan's new assault on terrorism Questioning the invisible hand Energy and climate change Barbra Streisand strikes again Press freedom and the internet On the brink Postal strike After the cull City jobs Shell Bills before Parliament Expenses scandal redux Gordon's gimmick Selling public property Bahrain Trawling for new ideas Scotland's fishing industry Currency catches Fish and financial crisis We're in it up to here Sarkozy and morality Colours of Jamaica German politics Progress, of a sort and at a price Romania's government Soviet words and deeds Russia Baltic brinkmanship Latvia, its neighbours and eastern Europe Portugal Where there's a will there's a row Total Airfrance Republicans resurgent The "mini mid-terms" But don't ask how much it costs Health reform takes a step forward Nespresso The road to 60 Cap-and-trade Brotherly love Homosexuality in the Lutheran church IBM Small comfort Gays and hate crimes After the storm Statewatch: Louisiana To surge or not to surge Philips Juggling technocrats and party hats Brazil's recovering economy No recession here Colombia's resilient economy Power to the people Mexico's monopolies All struck out Trade unions in Canada Family fallout Ecuador's president He promises a big clean-up South Africa and corruption Don't worry about killing people China and Africa Coups can still pay Madagascar and regional diplomacy Not much of an olive branch Palestinian farmers Laggards trying to catch up Education in the Arab world No shame in showing your face Egypt and the veil Exile and the kingdom Thailand's former prime minister The pendulum swings against the pit China's private coalmines To discourage the others Vietnam's crackdown on dissent Starry-eyed Japan's eco-diplomacy Banyan History wars A bit better Abortion Bangkok blues Global-warming diplomacy A question of sex Intersexuality Clash of the clouds Impenetrable Selling foreign goods in China Bad advertisement Business news in China Mr Ghosn bets the company Renault's electric-car gamble Hit Print Are you being served? American courts ponder "honest service" The Economist European Report Development Sinking together Italy's business clusters Call options The fight for GVT Resilient wreckers Business schools in the recession Schumpeter Someone to watch over them Slim pickings, no appetite Credit in America Buttonwood Banking on the banks Zurich Pandit and the playthings Citigroup sells Philbro Gutted instinct Emotions and investing Pretty nitty-gritty Derivatives regulation Call of the market Macrofinance in Bangladesh RBC Capital Markets Loose thinking Unconventional monetary policy Bidding farewell Bruce Wasserstein Economics focus Reality bites Methylated spirits The rise of epigenomics Satellites in the alphabet soup Not watching the Earth from space Eat for the ecosystem Conservation and cookery Looking beyond Through-the-wall vision A patchwork quilt The evolution of flying reptiles England's revolution British history 1688: The Modern Revolution. By Steve Pincus. Yale University Press; 664 pages; $40 and £28 Sorcerers and apprentices Cold-war history The Hawk and the Dove: Paul Nitze, George Kennan, and the History of the Cold War. By Nicholas Thompson. Henry Holt; 416 pages; $27.50 Credit Suisse Harlot's progress Prostitution in Georgian London The Secret History of Georgian London: How the Wages of Sin Shaped the Capital. By Dan Cruickshank. Random House: 688 pages; £25 Pride and fall New novel about ancient Rome Lustrum. By Robert Harris. Hutchinson; 464 pages; £18.99. To be published in America as "Conspirata" by Simon and Schuster in February A sad poem of American life Robert Frank's photographs I loves you, Porgy The Cape Town Opera on tour Reinhard Mohn Courses Courses Courses Courses Courses Courses Courses Courses Appointments Appointments Appointments Appointments Tenders Appointments Announcements Property Property Tenders Business & Personal Overview GDP forecasts Output, prices and jobs The Economist commodity-price index Trade, exchange rates, budget balances and interest rates MBA salaries Markets Economist Intelligence Unit Patek Philippe

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