GuGuDu
首页
最近更新
全部外刊
加入会员
登录
注册
GuGuDu
首页
最近更新
全部外刊
更多分类
登录
注册
经济学人
The Economist
2024-06-29
France’s centre cannot hold
The world this week
Politics
Business
KAL’s cartoon
This week’s covers
Leaders
Keir Starmer should be Britain’s next prime minister
What to make of Joe Biden’s plans for a second term
Simple steps to stop people dying from heatwaves
LLMs now write lots of science. Good
Macron has done well by France. But he risks throwing it all away
Letters
Letters to the editor
By Invitation
A hard-right government might disrupt France’s relations with Europe
A business leader on why he’s backing Donald Trump
Briefing
What would Joe Biden actually do with a second term?
Asia
Meet the incels and anti-feminists in Asia
Casinos are booming in South-East Asia
Narendra Modi needs to win over low-income Indians
Takashima Ryosuke is Japan’s youngest ever mayor
Ancient artistic loot will finally make its way back to Cambodia
United States
Young voters strongly favour Joe Biden, but will they turn out?
True-crime fans are banding together online to try to solve cases
Przekrój, an iconic Polish magazine, relaunches in America
Non-white American parents are embracing AI faster than white ones
What to make of the US Supreme Court’s latest abortion ruling
Research into trans medicine has been manipulated
In New York, the Democratic establishment strikes back
Middle East & Africa
The “Venice of Africa” is sinking into the sea
Mauritania is a beacon of stability in the coup-prone Sahel
A new breed of protest has left Kenya’s president tottering
Is the American-built pier in Gaza useful or a fiasco?
The job of Iran’s president is a study in humiliation
The Americas
An apparent coup in Bolivia founders, but the country remains in trouble
Vancouver pioneered liberal drug policies. Fentanyl destroyed them
A Kenyan-led security mission finally starts to arrive in Haiti
Europe
Emmanuel Macron’s centrists are facing a disastrous first-round vote
European gangs are getting better at making their own illegal drugs
Death and destruction in a Russian city
Finland’s shrinking high schools are importing pupils from abroad
Can António Costa make a success of the world’s hardest political gig?
Britain
What the remaking of Labour reveals about Sir Keir Starmer
The Economist’s final prediction points to a Tory wipeout in Britain
On shame, Liz Truss and the turnip Taliban
The British election is not close. But the race in Bicester is
The cost of Britain’s cast of ex-prime ministers is mounting
Julian Assange’s plea deal: a suitable end to a grubby saga
Why the next Westminster scandal is already here
International
The rise of the truly cruel summer
Business
Is the revival of Paris in peril?
European millionaires seek a safe harbour from populism
A new lab and a new paper reignite an old AI debate
Why everyone should think like a lawyer
Why big oil is wading into lithium
Boom times are back for container shipping
Is artificial intelligence making big tech too big?
Finance & economics
Will services make the world rich?
American stocks are consuming global markets
McDonald’s v Burger King: what a price war means for inflation
The economics of the tennis v pickleball contest
Science & technology
The race to prevent satellite Armageddon
A deadly new strain of mpox is raising alarm
At least 10% of research may already be co-authored by AI
Culture
Donald Trump’s return is making Hollywood nervous
What ails Britain’s left-behind places?
A clear-eyed account of Ukraine under siege
The döner kebab has a meaty role in German society
How Kronos became the world’s most innovative string quartet
Why travel guidebooks are not going anywhere
The Economist reads
Books (and films) about the joy and pain of music festivals
Economic & financial indicators
Economic data, commodities and markets
Obituary
Willie Mays’s philosophy was simple: They throw the ball, I hit the ball