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The accession of King Salman in Saudi Arabia
An unholy pact
Western leaders must do more to push Saudi Arabia to reform, for its own sake as well as the...
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Thailand’s politics
Moral disorder
Whatever the generals think, smashing Yingluck Shinawatra and her brother is no cure for...
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China and the world
Yuan for all
China’s loans to foundering governments may seem a challenge to the IMF, but the biggest risks are...
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An editor’s farewell
The case for liberal optimism
John Micklethwait, who has edited this newspaper since 2006, leaves today. These are his parting...
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War on film
Bleeding red and blue
“American Sniper” celebrates regret-free heroism. Small wonder critics hate it—and half of...
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Labour relations
Watching fruit rot
If the dockworkers’ union blocks West Coast ports, shippers will find others
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Measles returns
Of vaccines and vacuous starlets
A rise in anti-vaccine sentiment has put everyone at risk
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Lexington
The end zone
The nation’s favourite entertainment faces many charges. One of them will finish it
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Canada’s economy
Beyond petroleum
Growth is shifting from the oil-producing west back to the traditional economic heartland. Political...
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Crime in El Salvador
The broken-truce theory
The end of an armistice between gangs has led to soaring murders
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Myanmar’s commercial capital
The square mile
After years of stagnation, Myanmar’s biggest city is developing at last
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Silent Tahrir Square
Birdshot in Cairo
Suppressing Egypt’s revolution is proving remarkably easy for President Sisi
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Attack in Tripoli
Islamic State heads west
Jihadists move into Libya’s capital by storming the country’s largest hotel
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Zimbabwean politics
Keep digging, Bob
A struggle for power between the president’s wife and another woman
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Russia and Ukraine
Understanding Putin’s plans
The Russian president is stepping up both the war in Ukraine and his confrontational rhetoric...
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War in Ukraine
Ceasefire no more
Renewed heavy fighting suggests that Russia has abandoned any pretence of sticking to the Minsk...
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Germany and Israel
A very special relationship
The post-war friendship of Germany with Israel is strong but fraught
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Poverty, crime and education
The paradox of the ghetto
Unnervingly, poor children seem to fare better in poor neighbourhoods
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The Litvinenko inquiry
Murder most mystifying
Truth, perhaps, about a Kremlin hit-job—but little prospect of justice
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British telecoms
Mobile marriages
A merger of O2 and Three would suit investors, but maybe not customers
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Schools in Northern Ireland
Rearguard action
Religious schools will endure in Ulster. Academic selection may not
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Bagehot
Murphy’s law
The Labour Party at last has a good helmsman in Scotland; he may not save it there
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Apple
iThrone
Apple reigns supreme when it comes to making money, but now faces even greater expectations
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Network neutrality
To be continued
The rules of the road on the internet will always be a work in progress
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Chinese legal mergers
Rules and laws
Can law firms merge when their legal systems differ? A test case from China
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Business and the euro
Only a tailwind
A weaker currency will help but cannot rescue the stagnant euro zone
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China’s financial diplomacy
Rich but rash
To challenge the World Bank and the IMF, China will have to imitate them
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Public debt in Africa
Not contagious
The Gambia’s financial woes do not portend an African public-debt crisis
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European banks
Easing means squeezing
Quantitative easing has both good and bad implications for Europe’s banks
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Banking in India
Downwardly mobile
Banks have signed up 120m customers in five months. That was the easy part
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Free exchange
As safe as houses
Banks have been boosting mortgage lending for decades, at the expense of corporate loans
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Particle physics
A new awakening?
Accelerators are getting bigger and more expensive. There may be a way to make them smaller and...
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Flavour science
The tastemakers
Researchers are still chasing the nature, and the number, of basic tastes
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Spain’s civil war
The opening act
A history of the first head-on collision between Europe’s major conflicting ideologies
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New American fiction
Magical realism
A pitch-perfect debut novel from an American director and screenwriter
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The war on terror
Blame game
After years of legal wrangling, Mohamedou Ould Slahi’s prison diary finally comes out. A sad and...
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Piero di Cosimo
Monsters and merry mayhem
A long-awaited exhibition re-examines the surrealist of the Renaissance
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Obituary: John Bayley
Of literature and love
John Bayley, English don, literary critic and husband of Iris Murdoch, died on January 12th, aged 89
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