News from 01/05/2010
2010; Gale Group;
Autores
Terje Gaustad Senior lecturer, Stefan Dobrev, Kieron Dey, Paul Pensig, Brad Koegler, Edwin Reubens, Jacco Kuipers, Victor Lanz, Duncan Balmer,
ResumoThe Economist Cathay Pacific Contents Chevron GE imagination The world this week Politics Business Standard Chartered Hublot Who should govern Britain? If not now, never Defending the NPT Acropolis now Europe's sovereign-debt crisis The great survivor In praise of television Jaguar DHL Get your plan ready, Mr Obama The Middle East peace process BASF America's boom period Eruptions The dawn of creation Export or die? The decline and fall Economist Online highlights Blackrock Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Things could only get better Boeing Here be dragons Wales and Scotland at the polls A day with Dave The Cameron campaign On the trail Campaign diary The hole in the election The budget deficit It's not over yet Polls and the election Accenture Who are we? The politics of immigration and identity When grown men cry Battle in Barking The last days of Gordon Brown A normal day's debate in Kiev Ukraine and Russia Hot potatoes Poland's presidential election Orban's triumph Hungary's new government Dr Rösler's difficult prescription Germany's health-care debate Going for markets The mid-terms loom Party politics A Washington two-step Deficit reduction Looking for waste California's government Horror from the deep The Gulf coast oil spill Taking the long view Venture capital in Ohio A bit of a pinch Houston's budget Standard Bank The budget-slasher The maths of a Green revolution Colombia's presidential election The show goes on Daniel Ortega's Nicaragua The joy of six The Netherlands Antilles Is it really back on track? The Middle East peace process Step by step Palestinians seeking unity again Are women on their way at last? The Saudis argue about sexual equality Setting a better example South Africa and HIV/AIDS Kill me quick African moonshine Living the dream The Shanghai World Expo From whence cometh my help The earthquake in Qinghai Seconds out, round one Debating China in Taiwan Head to head Stand-off in Bangkok A change in the climate Australia and carbon emissions Where there's smoke Smoking in Indonesia Banyan Things fall apart in Japan An awkward guest-list The future of non-proliferation A giant compromise? Whaling Another American way Controlling health-care costs Modi blues India's cricket scandals Emperors and beggars The rise of content farms Scaring the salarymen Chinese firms buy Japanese ones Hard yards Struggling shipbuilders Lights and action Electricity and development in China Schumpeter The corruption eruption The cracks spread and widen Neither a borrower nor a lender be Germany and Greece A pox on your swaps Financial regulation in America The brighter side CMEGroup Sachs and the shitty The Goldman hearings Recovery, very early stage Venture capital Something's not working America's labour market Economics focus Maddison counting Fly in the ointment Taxonomy Hunters and shoppers Navigation and the sexes The hormone of laddishness Behaviour of the sexes A sunnier outlook Artificial photosynthesis It's a bug's life The secret life of ants Anthill. By E. O. Wilson. W. W. Norton; 378 pages; $24.95 and £17.99 Theirs but to do and die The death penalty The Autobiography of an Execution. By David Dow. Twelve; 271 pages; $24.99 Last Words of the Executed. By Robert Elder. University of Chicago Press; 304 pages; $22.50 and £14.50 Cry, the beloved country Life in South Africa Ways of Staying. By Kevin Bloom. Portobello; 228 pages; £12.99 The paucity of hope Myanmar's evil junta Everything is Broken: A Tale of Catastrophe in Burma. By Emma Larkin. Penguin Press; 271 pages; $25.95. To be published in Britain by Granta in July as "Everything is Broken: The Untold Story of Life Under Burma's Military Regime"; £12.99 Feel of history The cold war The Atlantic and Its Enemies: A History of the Cold War. By Norman Stone. Basic Books; 668 pages; $35. Allen Lane; £30 On beauty English literature Concerning E. M. Forster. By Frank Kermode. Farrar, Straus and Giroux; 180 pages; $24. Weidenfeld & Nicolson; £14.99 A Great Unrecorded History: A New Life of E. M. Forster. By Wendy Moffat. Farrar, Straus and Giroux; 416 pages; $32.50. To be published in Britain by Bloomsbury in June as "e. M. Forster: A New Life"; £25 Past papers The Vatican Secret Archives Alan Sillitoe Courses Courses Courses Courses Courses Appointments Appointments Tenders Tenders Overview Remittances Output, prices and jobs The Economist commodity-price index Trade, exchange rates, budget balances and interest rates Firms' access to capital Markets Emerson Patek Philippe The Economist SES Also in this section Economist Changing the channel Beyond the box Television rushes online, only to wonder where the money is Ahoy there! The perils of piracy The lazy medium How people really watch television An emergency screen Mobile television is unlikely to take off The killer app Television needs sport almost as much as sport needs television Who needs it? Three-dimensional television is coming, whether you want it or not Here, there and everywhere Television is spreading in new directions An interactive future The last remaining mass medium needs to engage with its audience and target its offerings Economist
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