Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 14/11/2009

2009; Gale Group;

Autores

Ryan Dudzinski, Ali Miraj, Timothy Kirkhope Leader, Tim Kositzky, Todd Allen, Ignacio Arias,

Resumo

The Economist Airbus Philips Contents Royal Bank of Canada Louis Vuitton The world this week Politics Business SAP Credit Suisse Brazil takes off Options have a future Derivatives How to sink pirates Music industry Syngenta A city named sue Reforming libel law ExxonMobil Don't give up Israel, Palestine and America Deutsche Bank DHL Conservatives and Europe Cutting health bureaucracies Unfair to Panama Civil society Metaphysical geography Economist Georgia Allianz Heads in the cloud Debate on the future of computing Covidien Other highlights Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Hints of a new chapter Bahrain NatWest Hiscox The nuclear option The planning takeover Splitting the cost The economics of nuclear power Desperate measures Gordon Brown and the Tobin tax Hearts and minds Public opinion on Afghanistan BMW Still overcast, but brightening Britain's economic outlook Slightly less big brother The DNA database Invest in Turkey The great escape British banks in transition IG Markets The conjuror's bluff Nespresso Carbon Trust A new game of dominoes Germany's foreign policy Peace in sight? Turkey and the Kurds Sharia calling Islamic finance in France Portugal Cracked up The far right in Russia Right on down The far right in eastern Europe Merrill Lynch A birth dearth Demography in the Balkans International Business Machines Single market bargaining Her master's voice Presidential politics in Brazil Jaw-jaw war Venezuela and Colombia Hemlines and headlines Public morality in Brazil Lombard Odier Unfixable? Gloomy Jamaica Home thoughts from abroad Canada's prime minister Passing the baton Health-care reform Boom times College enrolment After the rampage The killings at Fort Hood T-Paw stakes his claim Tim Pawlenty and the presidential race The war on Bambi Culling deer Come home, Tom Joad Oklahoma's economy Rolling stuck Streetcars in Washington, DC Dixon in the dock Baltimore's mayor on trial Farmers v greens Will he jump? The leadership of Palestine Better than freedom? Iraq's mobile-phone revolution An emotive issue Rivalry over hummus When patience finally runs out Regional diplomacy and Zimbabwe Trouble at the grid Race and power in South Africa Taking the spice out of politics Hope for Zanzibar Don't ask Uganda and homosexuality Out of tune Japan's government Tactical retreat? Military strategy in Afghanistan A new way to annoy a neighbour Thaksin Shinawatra and Hun Sen A PR problem Singapore and immigration Nationalisation rides again China's state-owned enterprises Coconut dictator Fiji and Oceania Banyan Barack Obama's Asian adventure Virtually legal Drugs Extracting teeth, and other things The UN and corruption Google Apps Singing a different tune Music piracy Bulking up Media Stakes and mistakes State-owned enterprises NYSE Euronext The German charm offensive The fallout from GM keeping Opel Salesman of the irrational Face value Merger interruptus Oracle and Sun Microsystems Land of the setting sun Japan as number one Zurich Schumpeter The cult of the faceless boss Chicago Booth King Baudouin International Development Prize Over the counter, out of sight Dangerous froth The world economy The not-so-little guy Minsheng's IPO Leaning experience South Korea's recovery Accenture Subcrime White-collar trials High-speed slide American stockmarkets HM Revenue & Customs Buttonwood Paper promises, golden hordes Divided and overruled? Accounting rules The restless Italian Mario Draghi, international regulator Economics focus Secret sauce Standard Bank The skeleton of water Lagrangian coherent structures Holy shit! Gut bacteria and obesity Seeing clearly Electronics Athlete's foot Anatomy and sport How to exterminate a dinosaur A political lesson The history of the Arabic-speaking peoples The Arabs: A History. By Eugene Rogan. Basic Books; 553 pages; $35. Allen Lane; £25 Market idol The roots of the financial crisis How Markets Fail: The Logic of Economic Calamities. By John Cassidy. Farrar, Straus and Giroux; 416 pages; $28. Allen Lane; £25 Facing the frenemy Google Googled: The End of the World as We Know It. By Ken Auletta. Penguin Press; 384 pages; $27.95 The crabbiness is all Philip Roth's new novel The Humbling. By Philip Roth. Houghton Mifflin Harcourt; 140 pages; $22. Jonathan Cape; £12.99 The crown prince of Culver City Hollywood Irving Thalberg: Boy Wonder to Producer Prince. By Mark A. Vieira. University of California Press; 465 pages; $34.95 and £25.95 The coast of Utopia Bauhaus Claude Lévi-Strauss Courses Courses Courses Courses Courses Courses Appointments Travel Fellowships Tenders Business & Personal Businesses For Sale Tenders Property Overview Job vacancies Output, prices and jobs The Economist commodity-price index Trade, exchange rates, budget balances and interest rates Primary energy Markets The Economist Oracle The Economist HSBC Private Bank Also in this section Getting it together at last Economist Breaking the habit A brief history of Brazilian meltdowns Survival of the quickest Frequent crises have made for strong banks and nimble financiers Bndes Arrivals and departures Foreigners are investing in Brazil, Brazilian companies are going shopping abroad Condemned to prosperity Brazil has learned to love its commodity sector Maastricht University London Business School The self-harming state Companies are squeezed between an obstructive government and black-market competitors A better today Brazil's growing middle class wants the good life, right now Two Americas Brazil and the United States have more in common than they seem to Economist Madrid The Peninsula Hotels

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