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Too Small to Fail
Marios Lolos/Xinhua/eyevine, via Redux
A ‘bail-in’ saved Cyprus. But dark days are ahead.
The political elites in Brussels can once again breathe a sigh of relief. Cyprus did not implode and take the euro with it. In many ways, the latest drama in Cyprus followed a familiar pattern: the so-called troika of European leadership (the European Commission, the European Central Bank, and the International Monetary Fund) flew to a country on Europe’s periphery to rescue its failing banks, that country’s leadership balked, and then eventually caved to Brussels’s demands.
First World Problems?
Marvi Lacar/Getty
The global importance of emotions and health.
Here’s something to smile about: researchers have known for a while that there’s a connection between emotions and health. People with positive emotions tend to report being healthier—they even live longer—and those with negative emotions report being less healthy. But a limitation of this research was that it was focused on people in the developed world, leaving one team of researchers to wonder if the connection between emotions and health was just a “First World problem.
A Mother in Limbo
Kieran Doherty/Reuters
A new Amanda Knox trial means mixed emotions for the victim’s mother.
Arline Kercher —the mother of Meredith Kercher, whose 2007 killing in Italy led to the conviction, then acquittal of Amanda Knox and Raffaele Sollecito—will soon find herself forced to relive her daughter’s death yet again. That’s because, last month, the highest court in Italy overturned the duo’s acquittal, setting the stage for still more trials in the case. “It is always distressing to hear and read about the murder,” Arline told me by phone from England, where she lives.
Taliban Justice
Aref Karimi/AFP/Getty
Frustrated by corrupt and plodding government courts, Afghans are turning to Islamic judges.
When Wali Khan returned to Afghanistan in 2008, having spent his entire life in an Afghan refugee camp in Pakistan, his first order of business was to build a house on his late father’s patch of land in eastern Paktia province. But when he tried to reclaim the other 70 acres he believed to be his, he ran into big trouble. A powerful tribal family warned Khan and his four uncles not to touch the land that they claimed was theirs. “The whole village was threatening us with death,” Khan says, adding that the Ahmedzais are “strong, rich, and influential.
The Big Think
Jose Cendon/AFP/Getty
Water Wars There’s nothing quite like water. There’s no life without it and there’s no substitute for it. But as Brahma Chellaney reports in his new book, Water, Peace, and War: Confronting the Global Water Crisis, by the 2020s some two thirds of the world’s population will face problems getting enough of the stuff. In the United States and other highly developed countries, the battles over water pit those who want rapid economic development against those who insist on conservation.
The Pope’s Posse
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These aren’t yes men. Francis has assembled an advisory team hell-bent on fixing the church. Barbie Latza Nadeau on why some Vatican officials are polishing up their résumés.
On the one-month anniversary of his election, Pope Francis appointed a diverse advisory group from around the world to help him cure all that ails the Catholic Church. But will heads roll, or is this just a game of holy smokes and mirrors?The group of eight cardinals named by Francis represents all seven continents, sending a blaring message that the focus of the universal church may soon diverge from the myopic views from within the Roman Curia.
Mapping The Dangerous Future Of Jerusalem
Zed Nelson/Institute
In a city where borders mean everything, one stubborn man has made it his mission to record and warn others about changes to the city.
"The quip in Hebrew is ‘everyone pisses in the swimming pool. Not everyone does it from the diving board.’ What we’ve been watching in the last year is an unprecedented surge in settlement activities.” Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu “has been pissing from the high board, and what we hear from D.C. is, ‘hey, there is a light rain.’”Daniel Seidemann is not a man who trades in verbal niceties. An attorney by trade, American by birth, Israeli by choice, and director of Terrestrial Jerusalem, the NGO he founded, Seidemann has spent the last 20-odd years understanding, anticipating, and cautioning others about the ever-changing map of this burning city.
How North Korea Tipped Its Hand
Shin Young-gun/AP
The U.S. recovered the front section of the rocket used in North Korea’s satellite launch in December, which gave away the status of the regime's nuclear-arms program.
When North Korean engineers launched a satellite into space December 12, it seemed like business as usual, with the familiar cycle of condemnations from the West and statements of defiance from the Hermit Kingdom. But that launch also led many U.S. intelligence analysts to assess that Pyongyang possessed the ability to miniaturize the components necessary to yield a nuclear explosion for a crude warhead that would sit atop a ballistic missile.
Inside Aleppo With the Rebels
Yusuf Sayman
Photojournalist Yusuf Sayman ventured to Aleppo’s front lines for three days in early April and returned with these searing portraits of the rebels’ desperate fight.
Why are the Israelis so Damn Happy?
Eitan Simanor/Gamma-Rapho via Getty
A new study shows them to be among the most contented in the Western world. What gives? By Tiffanie Wen
By now everyone in Israel has read the results of the study published earlier this month that showed Israelis ranked among the happiest people among the Western nations, despite an extensive laundry list of problems in their country.Israel ranked low in terms of income, housing, education and security for example—all things we would typical associate with contentment. As an Asian-American who hails from San Francisco, I could add a few of my own complaints to the list: lack of ethnic food, the outrageous cost of imported goods, the raging summer heat, the marginalization of minorities and refugees, and the famous Israeli frankness that has me constantly fielding questions about why I pay so much for my apartment and my (ever so subtle) fluctuation in weight (Up or down? Eating cakes or working out?), chief among them.
Cheat Sheet
World News
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COME ON NOW
Gay Marriage Bill Splits Parliament
Cameron faces Tory rebellion.More
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TENSE
North Koreans Seized Chinese Boat
While Pyongyang fires off sixth missile in three days.More
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BATTLE
Syrian Troops Take Rebel Stronghold
With the help of Lebanon’s Hezbollah.More
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VIOLENCE
Dozens Killed in Iraq Bomb Blasts
Baghdad worst hit, with eight explosions.More
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SYRIA
Assad, Hezbollah Retake Rebel City
Significant win for regime.More
Hot Air Balloon Crash Turns Deadly
Hot air balloons collided in mid-air over Cappadocia, Turkey on Monday morning, a fatal accident during the common tourist activity. A Brazilian man was killed, and 24 more were injured.
Women in the World
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Japan’s Kidnapping Problem
Dozens of American children are abducted to Japan every year—not by strangers, but by... More
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Keeping My Risky Breasts
My genetics suggest a high risk of cancer, like Angelina Jolie.... More
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Abramson Leans In
New York Times Executive Editor Jill Abramson discusses multimedia, covering the Boston... More
Malala's 'New Life'
She is a true inspiration. Teenage activist Malala Yousafzai has released a video statement for the first time since being shot by the Taliban last October. 'God has given me this new life,' Malala says, and in return, she is launching the Malala Fund, created to help educate children all over the world.
Latest from The Daily Beast
Newsweek Global
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The Last of His Species
What’s the greatest living Arctic explorer to do when his funding disappears? More
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Catsimatidis Disses Bloomberg
A supermarket mogul sets his sights on becoming mayor of New York. More
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Of Art and Anarchy
Is Singapore open to fostering disruptive art? More



