The Wayback Machine - https://web.archive.org/web/20110513055233/http://www.economist.com/world/

World politics

Afghanistan

Glimmers of hope 

It’s been a long slog, but Afghanistan may at last be able to contemplate more stable governmentMay 12th 2011

United States

The budget

The Blair House Project 

The White House and Republicans agree on where to go. They now have to work out how to get thereMay 12th 2011

The politics of the pump

A rhetorical blowout 

America’s politicians cannot control the price of petrol—but they still tryMay 12th 2011

Shale gas extraction

The need to be seen to be clean 

Natural-gas production is booming, but its green image is in questionMay 12th 2011

New York's old people rebel

To the barricades for Medicare 

A by-election may be a referendum on the Republicans’ health plansMay 12th 2011

The Republican nomination

The dance of the seven tweets 

The former speaker starts a presidential campaignMay 12th 2011

Health-care reform

The American exception 

Vermont may become the first state to have government-run health careMay 12th 2011

Concealed carry in Texas

Students v guns 

Anger at bills to allow concealed weapons on campusMay 12th 2011

Lexington

Save the fourth amendment 

Fear of crime, not just fear of terrorism, has nibbled away at America’s libertiesMay 12th 2011

The Americas

Education in Mexico

Schooling the whole family 

Teaching is improving, but slowly. Getting parents involved could speed things upMay 12th 2011

Ecuador's constitutional referendum

A close count 

The balance of powers hangs in the balanceMay 12th 2011

Canada's environment

Boreal blues 

In the frigid north tension grows between conservation and developmentMay 12th 2011

Asia

Pakistan after bin Laden

Humiliation of the military men 

Civilian leaders and the United States put pressure on the beleaguered generalsMay 12th 2011

Pakistan and China

Sweet as can be? 

Even an all-weather friendship has limitsMay 12th 2011

Hunger in North Korea

Let them eat maize husks 

The politics of hunger in a brutal placeMay 12th 2011

Rethinking nuclear energy in Japan

Japan unplugged 

Naoto Kan seeks to tap into the nation’s energy-saving moodMay 12th 2011

Australia's finances

Tough love, or plain tough? 

The government stakes its credibility on balancing the booksMay 12th 2011

Investigating Kyrgyzstan's ethnic violence

Bloody business 

Rare in this part of the world, an outside body is allowed to peer inMay 12th 2011

Banyan

Low expectations 

In Singapore winning 7% of parliamentary seats is tantamount to an opposition triumphMay 12th 2011

International

Group rights v individual rights

Me, myself and them 

From indigenous peoples to newly installed migrants, governments face awkward demands for collective exemptions and entitlementsMay 12th 2011

Human-rights abuses

Nothing new under the sun 

Some dictators may have fallen, but human-rights abuses continueMay 12th 2011

Global road safety

Fighting road kill 

The WHO has a plan to make the world’s roads less lethalMay 12th 2011

Demography

...isn't destiny, one hopes 

Good and bad news from the UN’s population projectionsMay 12th 2011

Middle East and Africa

International justice in Africa

The International Criminal Court bares its teeth 

Many Africans resent the ICC, but recent events suggest that they may now be less able to ignore itMay 12th 2011

Africa's growing middle class

Pleased to be bourgeois 

A third of Africans now live on at least $2 per dayMay 12th 2011

The crisis in Syria

More stick than carrot 

The killing goes on, as presidential emissaries put out feelers for dialogueMay 12th 2011

The new Tunisia

Bumpily ahead 

Despite recent riots, Tunisians are still on the road to democracyMay 12th 2011

Egypt's embattled Copts

Feeling ever more nervous 

The country’s Christians fear the prospect of sectarian strifeMay 12th 2011

Europe

German foreign policy

The unadventurous eagle 

Europe’s biggest economic power seems reluctant to have a foreign policy to matchMay 12th 2011

French foreign policy

Sarkozy's wars 

The voters’ backing for foreign military adventures does not help the presidentMay 12th 2011

Belarus's crackdown

Show trials again 

A brutal regime is attacking all its internal oppositionMay 12th 2011

Defence spending in eastern Europe

Scars, scares and scarcity 

East Europeans whinge about security, but few want to pay for itMay 12th 2011

Danish politics

To vote, or not to vote? 

Danes face a possible early election, with immigration again a big issueMay 12th 2011

Women in Turkey

Behind the veil 

Women’s influence in politics is growing, but it is still smallMay 12th 2011

Charlemagne

Decision time 

Germany continues to dither over how best to rescue the euroMay 12th 2011

Britain

The first year of the coalition

The uncivil partnership 

The bonhomie has gone, but the Conservatives and the Liberal Democrats have together begun remaking the stateMay 12th 2011

Elections in Northern Ireland and Wales

The double act continues 

May 12th 2011

Scottish politics

Independence by stealth 

Alex Salmond has defied predictions. Can he do it again?May 12th 2011

Misbehaving banks

Protection money 

A costly debacle has lessons for banks, customers and regulatorsMay 12th 2011

The Glencore effect

The big dig 

The increasing heft of mining firms is a challenge for fund managersMay 12th 2011

Privacy

The right to “no” 

Of privacy, the courts and (more importantly) the internetMay 12th 2011

Miscarriages of justice

Degrees of innocence 

The Supreme Court makes it easier for victims of wrongful imprisonment to get compensationMay 12th 2011

Bagehot

Pride after a fall 

Reason will get Nick Clegg and the Liberal Democrats only so farMay 12th 2011

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