Titre : | Summary of Vol. 452 n°9405 (2024) |
Type de document : | Article : Revues - Articles |
Dans : | The Economist (Vol. 452 n°9405, July 13-19th, 2024) |
Langues: | Anglais |
Catégories : |
[Eurovoc] GÉOGRAPHIE > Afrique > Afrique subsaharienne > Afrique occidentale > Nigeria [Eurovoc] GÉOGRAPHIE > Afrique > Afrique subsaharienne > Afrique orientale > Kenya [Eurovoc] GÉOGRAPHIE > Asie - Océanie > Proche et Moyen-Orient > Machrek > Palestine [Eurovoc] GÉOGRAPHIE > Asie - Océanie > Proche et Moyen-Orient > pays du Golfe > Iran |
Note de contenu : |
JUL 13TH 2024
How to raise the world’s IQ LEADERS Nutrition and cognition How to raise the world’s IQ Simple ways to make the next generation more intelligent School scandal Faddish thinking is hobbling education in the rich world Test scores have been stagnant or worse for more than a decade France’s shotgun election The French far right may not have peaked After winning 32% of the vote in parliamentary elections it will eye the presidency Credit-crushed How to prevent strongmen from hijacking the fight against dodgy money Egypt, India and Turkey are regular abusers Lord, make us proportional—but not yet Britain’s skewed election reinforces the case for voting reform. After 2029 The new government has more important things to deal with first LETTERS On Joe Biden, a Palestinian state, rising seas, Willie Mays, working late Letters to the editor BY INVITATION The American election A big donor says Joe Biden’s team has gone all Trumpian SCOTUS and presidential immunity Justice Sotomayor was right for the wrong reasons BRIEFING Food for thought Small investments in nutrition could make the world brainier Many pregnant women and babies are malnourished—and not just in poor countries EUROPE The French parliamentary election France is desperately searching for a government A bridge too far? When will Ukraine join NATO? The latest outrage A Russian missile hits a children’s hospital in central Kyiv Houdininomics Germany’s debt brake and the art of fantasy budgeting Ignorance is strength The Kremlin is rewriting Wikipedia Charlemagne Viktor Orban solidifies his credentials as the EU’s pantomime villain BRITAIN Labour and the world What does Labour’s win mean for British foreign policy? The enemy within Britain’s Labour government has declared war on NIMBYs Disproportional representation Britain’s general election was its least representative ever Poll post-mortem How did pollsters do in predicting the British election? Shore things Why are British beach huts so expensive? Independents’ day How the Gaza war affected the British election Bagehot The new front line of British politics is just lovely UNITED STATES The comeback kidder Joe Biden is failing to silence calls that he step aside Marginal revolution Anguish about Joe Biden’s candidacy is rational, polls suggest The party line The Republicans’ policy platform previews the coming campaign North Dakota rising Meet a leading Trump vice-presidential contender From mafia town to metropolis Las Vegas’s power couple says goodbye to power Lexington How do you solve a problem like Joe Biden? MIDDLE EAST & AFRICA Elections in Iran Iran’s new hope: a cardiologist president The flow of aid Why food is piling up on the edge of Gaza Tightrope over Gaza Jordan’s Islamists have been boosted by the war in Gaza Half a bowl of stew Soaring food-price inflation is hurting Nigeria’s poor Zacchaeus climbs down Kenya’s deadly Gen-Z protests could change the country THE AMERICAS Voting against Maduro A new danger for Venezuela’s autocrat Of Milei and Moses In Catholic Argentina, Javier Milei embraces Judaism Unhappy union The irrelevance of Mercosur ASIA No business like sow business The world’s next food superpower Bear-hugging bros Narendra Modi cuddles up to Vladimir Putin in Moscow Politics in Japan Social-media populists have arrived in Japan Banyan Singapore’s foreign admirers see only the stuff they like CHINA Under Xi’s gaze China views America’s presidential nightmare with mirth—and disquiet United Front summer camp Songs, pandas and praise for Xi: how China courts young Taiwanese Artefacts that serve a purpose China is using archaeology as a weapon Chaguan What China means when it says “peace” INTERNATIONAL Cable ties How China and Russia could hobble the internet SPECIAL REPORT Schooling’s stagnation Schools in rich countries are making poor progress Teachers The rich world’s teachers are increasingly morose Technology Will artificial intelligence transform school? Soft skills Efforts to teach character bring promise and perils Back to basics England’s school reforms are earning fans abroad Schooling’s stagnation Sources and acknowledgments BUSINESS Past their prime America’s giant armsmakers are being outgunned Power drain Why most battery-makers struggle to make money Peering across the Rhine What German business makes of France’s leftward turn Where’s my money? Europe’s biggest debt-collector has a debt problem Tit for tat, not Tesla The EV trade war between China and the West heats up Bartleby The CEO’s alternative summer reading list Schumpeter Once high-flying Boeing is now a corporate criminal FINANCE & ECONOMICS Halting his charge Trumponomics would not be as bad as most expect On the money Betting markets are useful when politics is chaotic Retaliate, negotiate, repeat Europe prepares for a mighty trade war Buttonwood The dangerous rise of pension nationalism Good cop, bad cop How strongmen abuse tools for fighting financial crime Free exchange Xi Jinping really is unshakeably committed to the private sector SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY Artificial intelligence Researchers are figuring out how large language models work Periods A scientific discovery could lead to leak-free period products Windows on the past Freeze-dried chromosomes can survive for thousands of years Aquaculture Vaccines could keep salmon safe from sea lice CULTURE Backstabbing blockbusters Power-grabbing tips from “House of the Dragon” and “Shogun” Back Story The drama of election night: a critical guide A date with destiny and your data What happens to your data when you die? What a racket Whoever wins at Wimbledon, many of tennis’s professionals are losers Dance of death A history of Hamas dispenses with some pervasive myths Heads will roll Henry VIII’s wives get their revenge ECONOMIC & FINANCIAL INDICATORS Indicators Economic data, commodities and markets OBITUARY Haunted by a painting Pål Enger never quite knew why he had to steal “The Scream” |
En ligne : | https://www.economist.com/weeklyedition/2024-07-13 |
Exemplaires (2)
Code-barres | Cote | Support | Localisation | Section | Disponibilité |
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009538 | ECO | Revue | Centre de documentation du CERDI / Ecole d'Economie | Salle de lecture | Disponible |
009539 | ECO | Revue | Centre de documentation du CERDI / Ecole d'Economie | Salle de lecture | Disponible |