News from 08/05/2010
2010; Gale Group;
Autores
Morice Mendoza, Bjorn Segendorf Special adviser, Dwight Bramble, Ashok Ramasubramanian, Alexandros Zenon commissioner, Stanley Pinto, Susanne Ackum State secretary, Paul Osborn, John Reid, Wilson Cabral De Sousa,
ResumoThe Economist Mandarin Oriental Contents Johnson Controls GE imagination The world this week Politics Business Bahrain Credit Suisse But can he govern? Coming to a city near you? The chaos after Greece's rescue Deep trouble The oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico Fools rush in Arizona's attempt to reform immigration The charms of Canada The least-bad rich-world economy Nomura A brilliant idea from the UN UNESCO and Equatorial Guinea Sweden's bank tax Cyprus Emerging markets White elephant Shadow catcher Economist Online highlights Covidien Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus International Business Machines Invisible and heavy shackles Boeing How it went on the day Election results Going postal Fraud and the election Intel A lamentable legacy The economy after the election Korean Air Cold feet Prudential's Asian acquisition Out with the old and the not-so-old Retiring from Parliament Night-time at the museum Cultural attractions Standard Bank The sad end of the party The Greek crisis Greased up Greece's woes and the neighbours Hitachi Crooked in Calabria The Italian mafia A coalition kaleidoscope North Rhine-Westphalia's election Malaysia International Islamic Financial Centre Many wives' tales Polygamy in France Hyatt Gold Passport A Balkan imbroglio Serbia and Montenegro Zagreb wars Croatia's troubles Taiwan The euro's existential worries The backlash begins Arizona's immigration crackdown The Times Square scare Terrorism As jobs fade away The middle-class task-force The sensible insurrection Midwestern primaries After Murtha Pennsylvania The politics of disaster Santander The Goldilocks recovery Canada's resilient economy After Arias Costa Rica's new president Power grab Another Bolivian nationalisation The politicians wrangle as the nerves of the people jangle Iraq still adrift A president trots the globe Iran's UN diplomacy Tap that water Dams in Africa So who will really take charge? The death of Nigeria's president On your tractor, if you can South Sudan's biggest ethnic group The Beijing consensus is to keep quiet The China model Annals of weird diplomacy Kim Jong Il in China Futenma farce Japan's base dispute with America Himalayan precipice Nepal System error Voting in the Philippines Winners and losers Rebuilding Sri Lanka's north The troubling dynamics of insurgency Afghanistan Banyan Wheel of misfortune Sweet to tweet Politics and Twitter Ancient Athens online Deliberative democracy Pot (kettle) black Corruption in sport The box office strikes back The worldwide cinema boom Love is in the air UAL and Continental agree to merge Vale of the trolls An acquisition in aluminium Join the party! China and foreign companies Message of hope Greeting cards La vie en rose Women on company boards Case studies Business education Schumpeter In the black stuff Black storm rising Zurich Falling stars Iberian banks Fear spreads The euro zone's debt crisis Buttonwood Greek chorus of boos Green back Currencies Private inequity Fees at buy-out funds Shafted Australia's resource tax J'accuse Société Générale's rogue trader Economics focus Home improvements A cave man blinking in the light The Neanderthal genome Silky circuits Bioelectronics Bladder control Airships as satellites The almost-winning addiction Gambling Efficient shapes A wild, wild place The American West The Last Stand: Custer, Sitting Bull, and the Battle of the Little Bighorn. By Nathaniel Philbrick. Viking; 466 pages; $30. The Bodley Head; £20 Be worried Rise of emerging markets Losing Control: The Emerging Threats to Western Prosperity. By Stephen King. Yale University Press; 246 pages; $30. Published in Britain by Yale University Press as "Losing Control: Why the West's Economic Prosperity Can No Longer be Taken for Granted"; £20 Simplifying the argument Reconciling prosperity with nature The Plundered Planet: Why We Must-and How We Can-Manage nature for Global Prosperity. By Paul Collier. Oxford University Press; 271 pages; $25.95. Published in Britain by Allen Lane as "The Plundered Planet: How to Reconcile Prosperity with Nature"; £20 Her dark materials Medical research The Immortal Life of Henrietta Lacks. By Rebecca Skloot. Crown; 384 pages; $26. Macmillan; £18.99 Edge of the world New fiction: David Mitchell The Thousand Autumns of Jacob de Zoet. By David Mitchell, Sceptre; 469 pages; £18.99. To be published in America by Random House in June; $26 Islam's many hats The Middle East Meccanomics: The March of the New Muslim Middle Class. By Vali Nasr. Oneworld; 308 pages; £16.99 Paradise Beneath Her Feet: How Women are Transforming the Middle East. By Isobel Coleman. Random House; 352 pages; $26 The sleeper awakes The art market Fred Halliday Courses Courses Courses Appointments Appointments Business & Personal Tenders Announcements Business & Personal Overview The Economist poll of forecasters, May averages Output, prices and jobs The Economist commodity-price index Trade, exchange rates, budget balances and interest rates Digital music sales Markets Intelligent life Louis Vuitton
Referência(s)