By C.W. | LONDON ACADEMIC economists crave citations. And if a researcher gets an appointment at a prestigious university, or becomes a government adviser, it might mean that they get a few more. But what is the effect of the most prestigious prize of all? You would think that the Nobel Memorial Prize in Economic Sciences, first awarded in 1969, would send the winner’s citation count through the r
A SOMBRE exploration of love, responsibility and death, “Kaze Tachinu” (“The Wind Has Risen”) is being described as Hayao Miyazaki’s first film for grown-ups. Having spent half a lifetime making exquisite fantasies for children, Mr Miyazaki, now 72 and regarded as the reigning genius of Japanese cinema, has returned to tackle the true story of an aeroplane-maker who worked through the second world
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Abe’s master planShinzo Abe has a vision of a prosperous and patriotic Japan. The economics looks better than the nationalism WHEN Shinzo Abe resigned after just a year as prime minister, in September 2007, he was derided by voters, broken by chronic illness, and dogged by the ineptitude that has been the bane of so many recent Japanese leaders. Today, not yet five months into his second term, Mr
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