Jornais Acesso aberto

News from 08/04/2006

2006; Gale Group;

Autores

STEVE SIMKO, Mark Shapiro, Kris Winder, ANT EVANS, Alan Sealey, Richard Colman, Davide Mozza, Mejidi Anaisi Suleiman,

Resumo

The Economist Love Cartier Contents Subscription service BP The world this week Politics The world this week Business Accenture Invest Australia The state is looking after you Basta, Berlusconi Italy's election A blow to Thai democracy Thailand When enough is enough Term limits in Africa Riding a wave Mergers and acquisitions Still waiting for the big one Current-account deficits Charter for success? A new dawn Knowledge sharing Talk peace Spuds you don't like The unwelcome guest Word for word Stretching a metaphor The Economist Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Executive Focus Lafarge A sad Italian story Heaven for gerontocrats Italy's ageing leaders Boeing Tug of war Pension reform The dying swan Bird flu Thrown together, blown apart Political-party finances BASF BlackBerry Taken out Northern Ireland GE Cops and bureaucrats Organised crime A bottomless pitch Football The siege of Dale Farm Travellers' troubles Caught in the middle A tale of two prime ministers France Sense and nonsense Hungary's election Rebranding time A better Bosnia The Peninsula American Airlines Dora's dreams Greece's foreign policy Euro Ncap Costalot Spain and corruption From Bayreuth to Theresienstadt German music LG Stability v flexibility The long goodbye Republican woes Hacks who hack Golf and politics Blood and treasure Paying for Iraq A hard sell Nuclear dealings with India Showdown averted Presidential powers Health care for everyone Massachusetts Lexus The Tancredo tendency Harper's five easy pieces Politics in Canada (1) Prairie regicide Politics in Canada (2) Taking on big mining Peru's election Boob tube Television in Mexico Leaving the door ajar Oil in Venezuela In his father's shadow Morocco A big man in a small cell Charles Taylor The wild west Iraq Blocked in Baghdad Iraqi politics Goodbye ... or au revoir? Thailand Badawi's grand plan Malaysia Floored Japan's opposition The private sector to the rescue India's defence industry The meter is ticking China Out of the dorm Celebrity in China Last tango in Detroit? General Motors, Delphi and the unions Don't feed the zombies Bankruptcy The urge to merge Alcatel and Lucent Runway rivals Japanese airlines The Dutch discount Investor activism The shedding giant Mining No gold please, we're Romanian Romania Face value Still changing the subject The avuncular state Societe Generale One more unto the breach, dear clients, once more Mergers and acquisitions Learn as you churn General Electric Leading us astray? Business-confidence surveys Embraer Istithmar A mixed week Citigroup and its regulators Delightful Banking in Turkey Rot in the vaults Chinese banks Stylish haircut Emerging-market debt Economics focus Myths and migration Accidence and substance Dark matter Tales of the unexpected Medicine Just say "R" Influenza A fish out of water Palaeontology World Press Group Brazil for beginners Latin America Neither here nor there New fiction Led by donkeys War in Iraq Internal combustion Religion and politics Brave new worlds Design The big book index Worldwide bestsellers: travel books Pierre Clostermann Courses Courses Courses Courses Courses Courses Courses Appointments Courses Appointments Appointments Appointments Appointments Announcements Appointments Tenders Tenders Tenders Tenders Business & Personal Property Tenders Overview Economic forecasts Output, demand and jobs Prices and wages Money and interest rates Stockmarkets Trade, exchange rates and budgets The Economist commodity price index Taxing wages Overview Economy Financial markets The Economist Oracle The Economist South Africa Chasing the rainbow From revolution to evolution THE ANC is becoming a more ordinary party Africa's hegemon Thabo Mbeki's many foreign-policy successes, and his one big failure Righting the wrongs of apartheid But affirmative action has its limitations Ladders out of poverty No education, no future The view from the shacks Miserable but not quite hopeless All together now Public-private partnerships have worked wonders in fighting crime Keep chasing If South Africa pursues its rainbow vigorously enough, it may find a pot of gold The Economist

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