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Islam, democracy and soldiers
Muhammad Morsi was incompetent, but his ouster should be cause for regret, not celebration
Immigration
Fixing America’s broken immigration system would be good for the country—and for the Republican Party
Transatlantic espionage
European governments should not kick up a fuss about American spying. They have too much to lose
Britain’s economy
Why being 159th-best at investment is no way for a country to sustain a recovery
International finance
The Eurobond’s 50th birthday has lessons for governments about how not to regulate finance
Letters
Egypt’s coup
The Egyptian army, with widespread popular support, has ended the presidency of Muhammad Morsi. It has not ended the nation’s troubles
Defence spending
Drone warfare
Ballot measures in California
Immigration reform
Obamacare
Should Detroit sell its art?
Student loans
Lexington
Venezuela’s government
Brazil’s protests
Chile’s presidential primaries
Infrastructure in Colombia
Electoral reform in Japan
Mumbai’s hungry high rollers
Bhutan at the polls
Australian politics
Repression in Tajikistan
Gay rights in South-East Asia
Social spending in Asia
Returning students
Rights for the elderly
Ethnic unrest in Xinjiang
The UN and Mali
Jihad in Niger
Somalia and its Shabab
The conflict in Syria
Israel and Palestine
Portugal’s woes
Spanish politics
Ireland
Bulgarian protests
French textbooks
Russian justice
Charlemagne
The economy
The Scottish economy
High-speed rail
Apples
Universities
Labour and the unions
Bagehot
American espionage and Europe
Vatican scandals
Steel
Executive pay
Zynga
German energy
Indian energy
Taiwan’s information-technology industry
French restaurants
Schumpeter
Markit
Buttonwood
China’s banks
Bank bondholders
Transatlantic trade talks
LVMH and Hermès
Fund management
Free exchange
Stem-cell therapies
Plant communications
Battery technology
Forensic zoology
Infographics
Statistics
Post-war Britain
New fiction
The Greek revolution
Venetian glass