Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 28/11/2009

2009; Gale Group;

Autores

David Howell, Raymond Odierno General, Michael Mann Colonel, Avi Lev, Marc Riese, Lawrie O'connor,

Resumo

The Economist Boeing Hp Contents Chevron International Business Machines Corporation The world this week Politics The world this week Business HSBC Hublot The quiet American Behold, two mediocre mice Europe's motley leaders The curse of defeatism Deflation in Japan Credit Suisse Middle-class struggle The future of entertainment Bahrain A heated debate Climate change Gecapital General Raymond Odierno Serving in Afghanistan Looking beyond Europe Present spending The damage done But, but, but. . . Economist ExxonMobil Greener than thou Climate-change debate Other highlights Online Contents Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Front line against the Taliban Deutsche Bank Malaysia International Islamic Financial Centre Missionary positions The religious influence in politics The joys and perils of flying high Anglo-Catholicism Bigger than you thought Bank rescues Prudential Knockout Bank charges IG Markets A taxpayer punt A venture fund for innovation Gordon's angel Britain's woman in Brussels Shell Lessons from a hung parliament Scotland's minority government Year zero NatWest Dmitry Medvedev's building project Russian modernisation Unsustainable Spain's economic troubles Pictet Funds The du und du waltz German linguistic correctness See you in court Kosovo and Serbia Disquiet on the eastern front America, NATO and eastern Europe We are all Belgians now The decider The making of the president's foreign policy The beginning of the end Health-care reform It's off to Denmark we go Climate change A gang of reds Republican governors Ungovernable? Camden's crisis Poked by pitchforks The Federal Reserve under attack A bunch of losers Neo-Nazis in Montana Loathing Joe Lieberman Ayatollahs in the backyard Iran and Latin America Something to hide? Canada in Afghanistan Wheels of revolution Venezuela's anti-capitalist cars Has it won? Syria Were we wrong? Iraq, Iran, America and The Economist Not just a game of football Algeria versus Egypt Not quite as bloody as before Strife in eastern Congo Go for the locals Kidnapping in Nigeria Anyone else worth considering? Namibia's election A destructive legacy The mosque at Ayodhya The trials of Sheikh Hasina Political trials in Bangladesh The power of the ballot Sri Lanka's Tamil minority Many rivers to cross Grand projects in South Korea Exhaust fumes and mirrors China's car market The bland leading the blind Indonesia's anti-corruption commission Looking for a hero The Philippines' presidential wannabes Massacre in Mindanao Banyan Suffragette city Wider still and weaker? The Commonwealth The gloves go on Fighting poverty in emerging markets Chicago Booth Nokia Bleak Friday Retail v e-tail in America Web-wide war Bing tries to sign up newspapers Another Roman empire Eni defies its critics More equal than others The problem with dual-class shares A reliable catalyst Reliance bids for LyondellBasell Out of Africa PPR spins off CFAO Man overboard Man, VW and Scania A roll of the dice Sands China's public offering Schumpeter Brand royalty A world of hits NYSE Euronext Standing still but still standing Dubai's debt A load to bear Tackling Japan's debt Same chords, different tune Parallels between Japan and the West The retiree's autopilot Pension planning Buttonwood A developing bull market Standard Bank Bail-out poker German banking The price also stinks China's latest commodity boom Accenture Economics focus Systems failure Zurich The Economist Mail-strom Climate change A hill of beans Environment Big is back The Large Hadron Collider Your plastic pal Synthetic biology Spanish eyes European fiction Your Face Tomorrow: Poison, Shadow and Farewell (Volume 3). By Javier Marías. Translated by Margaret Jull Costa. New Directions; 480 pages; $24.95. Chatto & Windaus; £18.99 Both sides of the coin The mystery of money Money (Art of Living). By Eric Lonergan. Acumen; 149 pages; £9.99. To be published in America by McGill-Queen's University Press in February Learning to make do and mend The Irish bust The Bankers: How the Banks Brought Ireland to Its Knees. By Shane Ross. Penguin Ireland; 312 pages; £14.99 Follow the Money. By David McWilliams. Gill & Macmillan; 298 pages; £14.99 Ship of Fools: How Stupidity and Corruption Sank the Celtic Tiger. By Fintan O'Toole. Faber & Faber; 240 pages; £12.99. To be published in America by PublicAffairs in March Right and left The human brain The Master and His Emissary: The Divided Brain and the Making of the Western World. By Iain McGilchrist. Yale University Press; 608 pages; $38 and £25 Once more unto the breach England's war with France Conquest: The English Kingdom of France 1417-1450. By Juliet Barker. Little, Brown; 512 pages; £20 Seeing is believing The Victoria & Albert Museum Earl Cooley Courses Courses Courses Appointments Courses Tenders Appointments Appointments Business & Personal Tenders Overview Metals Output, prices and jobs The Economist commodity-price index Trade, exchange rates, budget balances and interest rates Biggest sovereign CDS positions Markets RZB Group Greece Louis Vuitton The Economist Garanti Also in this section Suspended animation The world's biggest saleroom Auctions are moving online New or secondhand? The ins and outs of primary and secondary markets How to make art history Validation in the contemporary market The Pop master's highs and lows Andy Warhol is the bellwether Inflatable investments The volatile art of Jeff Koons Treasures reclaimed China is bringing home its works of art A whole new world Art is becoming increasingly globalised Economist

Referência(s)