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(1852)

The boot is on the other foot: Ukraine’s surprise incursion

The boot is on the other foot: Ukraine’s surprise incursion

Part of Russia is under foreign control for the first time since the second world war. We ask about the strategy behind the surprise raid—which may not be the last. The Paris Olympics were, all told, ...

12 Aug 202425min

Expelling mistake: the costs of hardline immigration policy

Expelling mistake: the costs of hardline immigration policy

The rich world is experiencing record migrant flows—and the attendant social upheaval. Finding immigration policies that are not economically ruinous is damnably hard. Our three-part series starts to ...

9 Aug 202425min

Arrivals haul: anti-tourism’s folly

Arrivals haul: anti-tourism’s folly

Tourists are getting decidedly less-warm welcomes in popular spots, but blunt anti-tourism policies are self-defeating. We look at how to maintain benefits for both the visitors and the visited. As Ru...

8 Aug 202421min

Walz onto the stage: Kamala Harris’s VP pick

Walz onto the stage: Kamala Harris’s VP pick

Tim Walz, a folksy Midwesterner who came late to politics, is on the Democratic ticket. We ask how he got there and whether he was the best tactical pick. A visit to Lebanon reveals a sense of forebod...

7 Aug 202426min

More than Sheikh could stick at: Bangladesh’s PM resigns

More than Sheikh could stick at: Bangladesh’s PM resigns

Sheikh Hasina, who led the country for 20 of the past 28 years with an increasingly authoritarian grip, was ultimately undone by student protests that would not be quelled. China may be world-leading ...

6 Aug 202424min

Enter staged right: misinformation feeds Britain’s riots

Enter staged right: misinformation feeds Britain’s riots

Unrest across the country has been driven in part by the provably false claims of right-wing provocateurs. We examine the real concerns underlying the violence, and how to end it swiftly. Japanese pol...

5 Aug 202422min

Tense exchange: Russia’s prisoner swap

Tense exchange: Russia’s prisoner swap

The biggest exchange of prisoners between Russia and the West since the Cold War included opposition leaders, journalists and prisoners of conscience. Our correspondent accompanies America’s defence s...

2 Aug 202427min

Yuan direction: Chinese firms head south

Yuan direction: Chinese firms head south

As domestic demand in China slows, and the West puts up trade and political barriers, Chinese firms are shifting their focus to poorer parts of the world. After Russian attacks on Ukraine’s energy inf...

1 Aug 202424min

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