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NATO’s summit
Mr Putin’s wake-up call
The Western alliance is responding better to Russian aggression in Ukraine. But there is more to do
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Ceasefire in Gaza
A war without winners
Sadly, the end of the fighting is unlikely to mark the beginning of the peace
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The euro zone
That sinking feeling (again)
If Germany, France and Italy cannot find a way to refloat Europe’s economy, the euro may yet be...
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Corporate settlements in the United States
The criminalisation of American business
Companies must be punished when they do wrong, but the legal system has become an extortion racket
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Criminalising the American company
A mammoth guilt trip
Corporate America is finding it ever harder to stay on the right side of the law
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New Hampshire’s Senate race
Casting stones in the Granite State
Democrats cannot afford to lose New Hampshire if they are to retain control of the Senate. But they...
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Lexington
The Rand Paul bubble
The libertarian senator from Kentucky is probably not the Republicans’ saviour
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Colombia’s peace process
The moment of truth
The government and the FARC grapple with victims, truth, justice and the mechanics of ending a...
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Peru’s media
Liberty’s enfant terrible
Enrique Zileri, a fighter for press freedom and democracy and against corruption
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India looks east
A strenuous September
India’s government is embarking on a whirlwind month of Asian diplomacy
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Japan’s right wing
Unwelcome change
A cabinet reshuffle poses risks for Japan’s ties with its neighbours
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Indonesian politics
Great expectations
Indonesia’s constitutional court has confirmed that Joko Widodo will be the next president. He...
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Religious sects
No-cult zone
A murder at a McDonald’s has given the party a pretext for attacking an old foe
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A ceasefire in Gaza
Long may it hold
Israelis and Palestinians breathe a sigh of relief. But the respite may not last
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South Africa and its parliament
Red-letter day
Julius Malema and his populists may be getting under the ruling party’s skin
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France’s government
Adieu, Cuba à la française
By getting rid of its leftists, François Hollande has created a more cohesive government. But the...
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Ukraine and Russia
War, not peace
The evidence of Russian incursions into eastern Ukraine becomes ever clearer
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Turkey’s new government
Davutoglu’s moment
Turkey’s new president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, picks a loyal prime minister
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Sexual exploitation
See no evil, hear no evil, speak no evil
An utterly shocking—and distinctively British—child sex abuse scandal
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Scotland’s referendum endgame
A war of attrition
The peculiar smallness of Scotland’s independence debate
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Business and Scottish independence
Grouse more
Scottish firms worry a lot about separation, but talk about it less
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Civil liberties
Speak loudly but carry no stick
The government’s surprisingly liberal anti-terrorism regime
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Architecture
Nasty, brutish and tall
Champions of brutalist architecture are having some surprising successes
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Bagehot
David Cameron’s half-cocked war
The prime minister needs to make a much clearer case for military intervention in Iraq
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The future of NATO
NATO flexes its muscle memory
Russia’s aggression in Ukraine has made NATO’s summit in Wales the most important since the end...
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Marketing
What are brands for?
Brands are the most valuable assets many companies possess. But no one agrees on how much they are...
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Accounting for brands
Untouchable intangibles
Sometimes you see brands on the balance-sheet, sometimes you don’t
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Cloud computing
Silver lining
Tech giants are waging a price war to win other firms’ computing business
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Burger King
Seventh time lucky?
Why some firms are flipped more often than a beef patty on a flame grill
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Natural gas in China
Shale game
China drastically reduces its ambitions to be a big shale-gas producer
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Schumpeter
A new green wave
A few pioneering businesses are developing “sustainability policies” worthy of the name
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Popping property bubbles
Choosing the right pin
House prices in Europe are losing touch with reality again. Deflating the bubbles will not be easy
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Israel’s economy
Shekeled and bound
The strong shekel is hurting Israel’s economy more than the conflict in Gaza
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Japan’s bond market
Quantitative freezing
Japanese bond traders say the central bank is stifling their market
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Pseudo-satellites
The west wind blows afresh
A cheap alternative to satellites is starting to take off
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