The path of increased resistance: Myanmar

The path of increased resistance: Myanmar

Protests against February’s military coup are only growing, even as the army becomes more murderous. The economy is paralysed. What can be done to put the country back together? In Cuba, the end of the Castro-family era is nigh; a new leader inherits a cratered economy and an ambitious vaccine-development effort. And some surprising road-fatality statistics from America. For full access to print, digital and audio editions of The Economist, subscribe here www.economist.com/intelligenceoffer

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Episoder(1865)

Get the lead out: Zambia’s toxic mine

Get the lead out: Zambia’s toxic mine

A site that closed more than a quarter-century ago is still slowly poisoning the residents of Kabwe with lead; a class-action lawsuit is at last seeking redress. Our correspondent visits the ancient m...

21 Des 202022min

Rehousing project: Bangladesh’s Rohingya

Rehousing project: Bangladesh’s Rohingya

The country’s refugee camps are packed and squalid, so the government is moving perhaps 100,000 Rohingya Muslims to a tiny island. Will life for them improve? Military tactics can be misleading; somet...

18 Des 202021min

And then, winter: ten years after the Arab Spring

And then, winter: ten years after the Arab Spring

A revolutionary conflagration a decade ago has almost entirely flickered out. We ask what happened to all the optimism and why real change has been so hard to achieve. A widely watched lawsuit reveals...

17 Des 202023min

This market went a little piggy: a capital-raising frenzy

This market went a little piggy: a capital-raising frenzy

Astonishingly, companies have raised more capital this year than ever before. We ask how capital markets shook free amid the pandemic—and what will happen with all that cash now. Our correspondent fin...

16 Des 202022min

Joe, College: Biden’s victory affirmed

Joe, College: Biden’s victory affirmed

America’s by-the-book electoral-college vote calmed concerns about another Trump-camp bid to overturn the election—but that is not to say the ructions are over. On an unannounced visit to a suspected ...

15 Des 202021min

So long, and we’re keeping all the fish: Brexit

So long, and we’re keeping all the fish: Brexit

Britain’s divorce from the European Union still hinges on sticky matters of fishing rights and the enforcement of fair competition, and time is rapidly running out to strike a deal. India’s fantastica...

14 Des 202018min

Taking the temperature: a climate chat with the UN chief

Taking the temperature: a climate chat with the UN chief

Ahead of a weekend meeting to assess and bolster the Paris Agreement, our correspondent speaks with Antonio Guterres about his reasons for cautious optimism. The founder of an upstart far-right Dutch ...

11 Des 202020min

If you already joined ‘em, beat ‘em: Facebook gets sued

If you already joined ‘em, beat ‘em: Facebook gets sued

American regulators have put mergers that they approved years ago at the heart of antitrust lawsuits—a tricky bid to curb the social-media giant’s market power. We examine the surge of an artist-led p...

10 Des 202021min

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