China: snapshot of a decade | World news | guardian.co.uk - 2 views
Cocoa - and your chocolate fix - is under threat | SE Smith | Comment is free | guardia... - 1 views
Iskandar Malaysia - the green mega-city rising above Singapore | Environment | guardian... - 1 views
Kenya building a digital future in Africa's silicon savannah | World news | guardian.co.uk - 1 views
Focus: Bananas | The Economist - 3 views
The world in 2060: The OECD's forecasts | The Economist - 3 views
-
In particular, the OECD's projections for 2060 (at constant purchasing-power parities) show the impact of fast catch-up growth in underdeveloped countries with big populations. Economic power will tilt even more decisively away from the rich world than many realise. In 2011 the current membership of the OECD made up 65% of global output, compared with a combined 24% for China and India. By 2060 the two Asian giants will have a 46% share of world GDP, the OECD members a shrunken 42%. India's economy will be a bit bigger than America's, China's a lot.
China's economy to overtake US in next four years, says OECD | Business | guardian.co.uk - 1 views
The great mobile technology leap forward | Technology | The Observer - 4 views
Globalisation - 4 views
-
Globalization is a contentious process. Ever since the term was first used to make sense of large-scale changes, scholars have debated its meaning and use. As the term became a globally popular buzzword, it served to crystallize disagreements about the direction of change in the world at large. By the end of the twentieth century, the meaning and merits of globalization were contested in the media and in the streets. Intellectual debate blended with political conflict. In the years to come, debates and conflicts surrounding globalization will increasingly affect the processes captured by the term.
Should we send penguins to the Arctic as food for the polar bears? | From the Guardian ... - 3 views
Ice loss in Greenland since 1960 - interactive | Environment | guardian.co.uk - 0 views
-
More than 4 trillion tonnes of ice from Greenland and Antarctica has melted in the past 20 years and flowed into the oceans, pushing up sea levels. The revelations come from a landmark study that provides by far the best measure to date of the effect climate change is having on the planet's biggest ice sheets
Ice loss in Antarctica since 1980 - interactive | Environment | guardian.co.uk - 0 views
-
"Ice loss in Antarctica since 1980 - interactive More than 4 trillion tonnes of ice from Greenland and Antarctica has melted in the past 20 years and flowed into the oceans, pushing up sea levels. The revelations come from a landmark study that provides by far the best measure to date of the effect climate change is having on the planet's biggest ice sheets"
Syria vanishes from the web | memeburn - 1 views
-
"Syria has disappeared from the internet. That's not an exaggeration either, nearly the entire Middle Eastern country has been cut off from the web. A post from research company Renesys reveals that what effectively amounts to all of Syria's internet connectivity shut down earlier today: Starting at 10:26 UTC (12:26pm in Damascus), Syria's international Internet connectivity shut down. In the global routing table, all 84 of Syria's IP address blocks have become unreachable, effectively removing the country from the Internet. We are investigating the dynamics of the outage and will post updates as they become available. A more detailed post reveals that 77 networks, representing 92% of the routed networks in the country experienced an outage. The outage comes among increasing violence in the country. According to the Daily Star, the government cut off internet as well as cell phone activity amid increasingly fierce clashes between government troops and rebels."
Daily chart: Choked | The Economist - 0 views
Megacity London: ever growing, ever more unequal? | Views of the World - 2 views
-
What is it about London? Population growth is slowing across most of Europe - people are having fewer children and, it could be argued, steps are being taken to try to reduce social inequalities. But London is unusual. London continues growing, and London is becoming more youthful. The middle aged and those who are poor, but not desperately poor, are being squeezed out. Graduates from the rest of Britain and the rest of the world flow in ever greater numbers and require ever higher degrees of optimism. Many fail to achieve their aspirations. Above them a few are becoming ever richer. Below them, as private rents and social housing becomes too expensive for huge numbers of lowly paid families and many leave, a new poor may be growing, less well documented, less well protected, with even less to lose.
Remittances: how much money do migrants send home? - interactive | Global development |... - 0 views
« First
‹ Previous
521 - 540
Next ›
Last »
Showing 20▼ items per page