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The Economist 28 2013 Calibre

  • SKU: BELL-215571572
The Economist 28 2013 Calibre
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

4.8

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The Economist 28 2013 Calibre instant download after payment.

Publisher: calibre
File Extension: MOBI
File size: 3.34 MB
Author: calibre
Language: English
Year: 2013

Product desciption

The Economist 28 2013 Calibre by Calibre instant download after payment.

Global news and current affairs from a European perspective. Best downloaded on Friday mornings (GMT)

Articles in this issue:
Politics this week

Business this week

KAL's cartoon

The protests around the world: The march of protest

China’s cash crunch: Bear in the China shop

Teaching and technology: E-ducation

Justice and the armed forces in Pakistan: The general in the dock

Climate-change policy in America, Europe and China: Tepid, timid

European Union enlargement: Keeping up with the Croats

Letters: On Iran, coastal homes, Mexico City, PRISM, London, publishing, bosses, Newcastle

Education technology: Catching on at last

Gay marriage: Windsor’s knot

The Supreme Court: Equality, debated

Abortion: Ms Davis goes to Austin

Immigration: A big wall of money

Agriculture: Stuffed

Greetings cards: The American way of death

Climate change: While Congress sleeps

Lexington: Above the fray, but part of it

Lexington: Correction

Brazil’s protests: The cries are answered

Economic reform in Cuba: A private affair

Sexism in Canada’s Mounties: The wild frontier

Australian politics: We need to talk about Kevin—again

Mongolia’s presidential election: Elbegdorj scrapes home

Protest in India: The little man

Floods in India: High and wet

South-East Asia’s smog: Unspontaneous combustion

Banyan: So near, and yet…

Financial reforms: Re-education through Shibor

Political balancing: Mixed messages

Economic decision-makers: Take a bow

The African National Congress: A sad and sorry decline

Zimbabwe’s coming election: The spirit of wrath is upon us

Libya’s opposition: Where green refuses to fade

Islam’s old schism: Sunnis v Shias, here and there

Qatar’s new emir: A hard act to follow

Crisis in Egypt: More worrying than ever

Germany in the world: The occasional leader

Italian politics: More trouble ahead

French political scandals: Tapping along

Turkey’s protests: Still out on the streets

Portugal and the euro: Floundering on

Albania’s election: Edi’s turn

Charlemagne: Europe’s new frontier

Exporting to China: Eastward march

Immigration: Your money is your bond

The spending review: The subtle knife

Legal aid: What price justice?

BBC Worldwide: Cut-throat or cuddly?

Reviving a troubled town: Bits and bobs

Bagehot: The little party behind the throne

Secrecy: Travels and travails

Internet protests: The digital demo

Prosperity and protest: Cry freedom

European telecoms: In a hole

Corporate computing: Ascending to the cloud

Housebuilders in America: Through the roof again?

The empire of Eike Batista: Eike’s breaky heart

The higher-education business: Honours without profits?

Hospital operators and Obamacare: Prescription for change

German business and English: No Denglisch

Schumpeter: Spooked by shale

India’s economy: Start me up

Buttonwood: Cut off by their sugar daddy

Mexico’s financial markets: Rolling with the punches

Banks and interest rates: Administer with care

Mediobanca: A little less tangled

Defining financial bigotry: Disparate times

Free exchange: Levying the land

Driverless automobiles: The car that parks itself

Stopping asteroid strikes: Defenders of the Earth

Cancer and the microbiome: A punch in the gut

Art and the animal kingdom: Of mice and Manet

Indian development: Beyond bootstraps

Cyber-warfare: Digital doomsters

Economic history: A sketch, not a portrait

Solitude: Sweet spot

Latin verse: In praise of poetry

The art of Meschac Gaba: Making space

The art of Meschac Gaba: Correction: Metropolitan Museum of Art

Lancelote Rodrigues

Output, prices and jobs

Trade, exchange rates, budget balances and interest rates

The Economist commodity-price index

Foreign direct investment

Markets

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