No port of call: coronavirus may sink the cruise industry

No port of call: coronavirus may sink the cruise industry

Cruise ships had been enjoying a golden era—until covid-19 came along. The pandemic has been a catastrophe for the industry. Stranded passengers have taken ill and even died, ships have been banned from ports, and revenue has collapsed. But lawmakers are unlikely to bail it out. In Sweden, daily life has been pretty normal, despite the coronavirus, but can that continue? And we report on Dutch disease—the language’s unusual affinity for poxy swear words.

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Episoder(1951)

Nine out of ten, doctors say: a promising coronavirus vaccine

Nine out of ten, doctors say: a promising coronavirus vaccine

A vaccine claimed to be 90% effective represents an enormous achievement. We discuss what questions remain and the regulatory and distribution challenges ahead. A string of recent African elections re...

10 Nov 202020min

Brought to heal: Biden’s chance to unite America

Brought to heal: Biden’s chance to unite America

President Donald Trump will go, but Trumpism will remain. Our editor-in-chief considers how President-elect Biden can repair the divided country he will inherit. Denmark aims to cull 17m mink that cou...

9 Nov 202022min

Abiy damned: Ethiopia’s looming civil war

Abiy damned: Ethiopia’s looming civil war

Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has taken drastic steps to quieten a state stacked with trained militias. The conflict could draw in more states—or the whole of the Horn of Africa. China’s increasing push f...

6 Nov 202021min

The lawyers of diminishing returns: America’s election

The lawyers of diminishing returns: America’s election

As President Donald Trump’s re-election path slims, his pledges to fight the results in court are multiplying. We look at the cases that may eventually decide the election. Global crises tend to affec...

5 Nov 202020min

Tally forth: America’s elections

Tally forth: America’s elections

The outcome remains unclear as vote-counting continues. We look at some of the surprise results, ask what happens next and examine how The Economist’s election forecast has held up. And we tag along w...

4 Nov 202021min

Poles’ position: an abortion-law backlash

Poles’ position: an abortion-law backlash

Poland already had some of the strictest laws on terminations, but the ruling party’s bid to tighten them further has sparked national outrage. We lay out what to expect on election night in America—t...

3 Nov 202021min

Lock step: England to shut down, again

Lock step: England to shut down, again

Prime Minister Boris Johnson all but ruled out a second lockdown, but his hand has been forced by England’s caseload. What are the political costs of his U-turn? Myanmar’s coming election will almost ...

2 Nov 202020min

Net losses: plunder of the oceans

Net losses: plunder of the oceans

The staggering extent of illegal fishing, and its human and environmental costs, are only just becoming clear. We ask how to put a shadowy industry on a more even keel. The old guard likes to mock mil...

30 Okt 202021min

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