Marrying too young has lifelong effects: on a girl’s body as much as on her education and career. We explore what is behind a sharp decline in child marriage in parts of Ethiopia. There’s an ancient-clothing trend in China that is mostly goofy fun. But its ethnic overtones may soon worry the Communist Party. And, a chat—as well as a hard-fought match—with Africa’s first World Scrabble Champion.
The Intelligence from The Economist - Planes, trains and automobiles: the travails of travel
Easter weekend is a busy travel time for the many people who celebrate it. If you’re lucky, it means some time off work. But you might be unlucky, and travel through a terrible airport (we talk about the world’s worst). Or perhaps you’ll splash out and take one of the many sleeper train services that are cropping up (we discuss why train travel is such a draw, particularly for artists). Or you might get stuck in traffic (we visit the places where traffic jams are seen as opportunity rather than nuisance). Safe travels!
The Intelligence from The Economist - [Redacted]: the Mueller report
The Intelligence from The Economist - Roads to success: Indonesia’s election
The Intelligence from The Economist - And then, silence: a Paris icon burns
The Intelligence from The Economist - Modi’s operandi: India’s enormous election
The Intelligence from The Economist - Bashir and present danger: Sudan’s coup
The Intelligence from The Economist - Brussels’ doubts: another Brexit delay
The Intelligence from The Economist - Bibi got back: Israel’s election
Binyamin Netanyahu looks set to win a fifth term as prime minister. How will his policies affect negotiations about some of the most contested land on Earth? Meanwhile in space, Israel’s Beresheet probe is set to land on the Moon—but the recent spate of lunar landings is more about national flag-planting than it is about science. And, how will economies adjust as the old increasingly outnumber the young?
Additional audio courtesy of NASA. Additional music "Fanfare" courtesy of Kevin MacLeod.
