Top stories
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Allawi triumphant
Iyad Allawi wins most seats in Iraq, but long wrangling will decide who rules
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How to help
Compromises and late-night discussions bring forth a mechanism for rescuing Greece
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The old man of the mountain
The discovery of a hitherto unsuspected mountain-dwelling hominid
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KAL's cartoon
Our weekly editorial cartoon
Also in the news
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Mexico, the US and drug gangs: Bringing in the gringos
Mexican and American officials unveil plans for unprecedented security co-operation. But will they work?
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France's beleaguered president: Sarko under the cosh
An erratic president needs a credible challenger: time to import a heavyweight bruiser from Washington
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Health reform in America: Signed, sealed, delivered
Barack Obama has transformed health reform from near death to fact. So how will Obamacare change America’s health system?
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Democracy in Afghanistan: Wise council
Village-development councils are taking on more serious roles
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The British economy: The pain to come
A terrible recession will be followed by a lacklustre recovery, but Britain is no basket-case
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Yukos haunts Rosneft: A spectre of litigation
Adverse court rulings are exhuming Russia's infamous expropriation
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Carbon markets: The wrong sort of recycling
Hungary’s sale of used carbon credits damages investor confidence
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Prenuptial agreements: For poorer
English courts used to ignore prenuptial agreements. Not any more
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Europe.view: What's in a name?
It is time for the most tedious dispute in the Balkans to be settled
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Lexington: From hope to change
Barack Obama has made history. But he can still make mistakes
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Art.view: Rogue urinals
Has the art market gone Dada?
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Green.view: It’s not easy seeming green
A backlash to New Zealand’s vow of purity
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Business.view: Social financial engineering
Britain's government tries a new way to finance social spending
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Tech.view: Cutting the clutter
A wireless replacement for all those pesky power cables
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Bagehot: With a whimper
Alistair Darling's budget was a fittingly bathetic end to Labour's time in office
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Banyan : A matter of life and death
Setbacks for opponents of capital punishment, but they are making more progress than meets the eye
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Charlemagne: The myth of the periphery
Forget core against periphery in Europe: the true divide is north against south
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Schumpeter: The health-care squeeze
Business is right to be scared by the costs of Obamacare
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Google and China: Searching questions
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Health-care reform: Hammering home reform
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Chinese foreign policy: Not pointing or wagging but beckoning
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Germany: Europe's engine
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Climate science: Spin, science and climate change
Over the past five days
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American politics: Signature event
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The battle of the sexes: Face off
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Health and life expectancy in America: How to live longer
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American politics after health reform: Now what?
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Slum populations: Slumdog millions
Over the past three days
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Dark matter for Friday
Data mapping on German irony, confessions of a spam scammer and design considerations for television and the internet
From Babbage
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Giving birth behind bars
A child suffers for his mother's sin
From Lexington's notebook
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Link exchange
The best of the rest of the economics web
From Free exchange
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Not a great leap forwards, but not a bust up either
Europe agrees a rescue plan for the euro
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Live online debate
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Other news
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Daily chart:
A ruinous pictureGreece may need more support than you think
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Banyan: A matter of life and death
Asia's opponents of capital punishment are making progress
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Obituary:
Doris HaddockA political activist who contested a senate seat at the age of 94
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