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August 19, 2013 | Vol. 182, No. 8

COVER
I Am Australian. So Am I (World)
Australia’s changing complexion and its growing engagement with Asia are reshaping its identity and place in the world

COMMENTARY
Little al-Qaedas Loom Large (Worldview)
The terrorist group’s franchise operations are a threat. Here’s how to deal with them

WORLD
Inside Nigeria’s Risky War
Why the campaign to crush the Islamist group Boko Haram may backfire on the Nigerian government and its allies

LETTERS
Pope and Change (Conversation)

UNITED STATES
The Surveillance Society (Privacy)
Secrets are so 20th century now that we have the ability to collect and store billions of pieces of data forever

SCIENCE
The Plight of the Honeybee
Mass deaths in bee colonies may mean disaster for farmers ― and your favorite foods

VIEWPOINT
Montevideo Shows the Way
Uruguay’s legalization of marijuana may signal an end to Latin America’s war on drugs

THE CULTURE
10 Questions for Manny Pacquiao
Boxer-Congressman Manny Pacquiao, 34, on life in and out of the ring: fighting, politics, China and God
August 12, 2013 | Vol. 182, No. 7

COVER
Why Germany Must Save the Euro (World)
Germans complain about profligate European partners and balk at underwriting more bailouts. But they need the common currency more than anyone else

COMMENTARY
The Pope’s Baby Step on Gays
Francis’ encouraging words show how far the Roman Catholic Church still has to go

VIEWPOINT
Egypt’s Liberal Guilt
The political figures who should have defended the country’s young democracy have betrayed it

LETTERS
Egyptian Democracy (Conversation)

WORLD
Massacre on the Streets of Cairo (Egypt)
Photographs by Mosa’ab Elshamy
The Tashkeel Diaries (Afghanistan)
Or how a young U.S. Peace Corps volunteer turned a bunch of Afghan kids into a national basketball team

THE CULTURE
Prince of Copenhagen (Travel)
The world’s best food city has a new culinary star

ESSAY
War of the Dons
A feud between two eminent Indian-born economists reflects a wider battle for the country’s future
August 5, 2013 | Vol. 182, No. 6

COVER
Broken City (U.S. Economy)
How Detroit’s epic bankruptcy could help the rest of America

COMMENTARY
A Fool’s Errand Worth Pursuing (Worldview)
There are many reasons the Mideast peace negotiations could fail ― but no reason not to try
The Half-Blood Prince
Britain welcomes an heir, born to a future King and (gasp!) a commoner

VIEWPOINT
Absence of Justice
The case of the Beijing airport bomber spotlights how the abused in China cannot get redress

WORLD
Meet the Female Members of the Afghan Military’s Elite Special Forces
In a country known for its harsh attitudes to women, they have everything to fight for
The World’s Most Dangerous Man (Terrorism)
Ibrahim Al-Asiri’s unique bombmaking skills make him the Obama administration’s top target

UNITED STATES
Heirs to the Thrones (Bloodlines)
Never mind the U.S. Constitution’s prohibition on American political royalty. Family dynasties still rule

LETTERS
Road to Joy (Conversation)
July 29, 2013 | Vol. 182, No. 5

COVER
A Pope for the Poor (World)
Will Francis’ personal humility and focus on poverty help revive the church’s fortunes on his home continent?

TRAVEL
Moscow Underground (Russia)
In the labyrinth under the streets of Russia’s capital, the walls and bunkers resonate with intrigue old and new

SCIENCE
The Power of the Bilingual Brain (Language)
Learning a second language can produce a nimbler mind. Now some schools are finding new ways to help students tap the benefits

LETTERS
Radical Buddhism (Conversation)

UNITED STATES
After Trayvon (Race)
The trial has ended, but the repercussions of a Florida teen’s death have only just begun

COMMENTARY
Stopping the Slaughter
All Americans must come together to end an epidemic of deadly urban violence

THE CULTURE
The Queen Stands Alone (Movies)
Cate Blanchett plays a Woody Allen woman ― and wins

ESSAY
Pack Up Paradise
It’s time to call time on the tacky travesty that is a Koh Phangan full-moon party
July 22, 2013 | Vol. 182, No. 4

COVER
Street Rule (Egypt)
Egypt’s elected president is felled by mass demonstrations. can a democracy be run by protest?

VIEWPOINT
Democracy’s Rorschach Test
What the Middle East sees when it looks at Egypt’s latest political upheaval

COMMENTARY
After the Coup (Worldview)
Egypt must reach out to the Islamists it is now jailing

LETTERS
Surveillance State (Conversation)

WORLD
Portraits of Pain (Bangladesh)
What the stories of the victims of the Rana Plaza collapse tell us about the price Bangladesh is paying for a better future

UNITED STATES
The Original Genius Bar (Science)
With money tight for scientific research, the Institute for Advanced Study offers big brains a priceless draw: freedom
Final Four for the 4-Foot set (Youth Sports)
What the second-grade basketball nationals ― yes, it exists ― says about youth-sports obsession

ESSAY
Would You Like Chicken ... or Chicken?
The Gelinaz dinner was part meal, part art happening and wholly unforgettable
July 8, 2013 | Vol. 182, No. 2

COVER
The Happiness of Pursuit (Part 1)
Americans are free to pursue happiness, but there’s no guarantee we’ll achieve it. The secret is knowing how ― and where ― to look

Free to be Happy (Part 2)
The declaration of independence enshrined the pursuit as everyone’s right. But the founders had something much bigger than bliss in mind

Got Joy? (Part 3)
The TIME poll asked Americans what makes them happy. Here’s how they answered

The Game of Happiness (Part 4)
Research reveals what helps ― and hurts ― in our pursuit of bliss

The States of Happiness (Part 5)
Achieving bliss is complicated, no matter where you are in the world

COMMENTARY
Big Data, Meet Big Brother (Worldview)
If computers can now predict our behavior, should governments watch our every move?

Life After Easy Money (The Curious Capitalist)
The Fed is finally making its move. Get ready for the biggest market shift in five years

WORLD

Cuban Evolution
In the twilight of the Castro era, change brings as much skepticism as hope

Green on Blue (Afghanistan)
How one Afghan friend became an enemy

Nowhere People (Syrian Refugees)
As Syrians fleeing sectarian bloodshed flood into neighboring countries, a photographer documents the spiraling refugee crisis

Heir Apparent (Royal Baby)
Why William and Kate’s firstborn, due in mid-July, is already a figure of global influence

BUSINESS
Farming the Desert (Breakthrough)
New ways to get water. Greenhouses that stretch for miles. Qatar’s audacious plan to grow its own food defies the limits of an arid land

THE CULTURE
Paging Summer
The authors of this season’s hottest novels recall their all-time favorite summer reads. Plus picks from luminaries in tech, fashion, science, film and TV

LETTERS
July 1, 2013 | Vol. 182 No. 1

COVER
When Buddhists Go Bad (Buddhism)
Buddhism is famous for its pacifism and tolerance. But in several Asian nations, monks are inciting bigotry and violence ― mostly against Muslims

VIEWPOINT
Myths and the Middle East
It’s time people in the region understood how American politics influences U.S. foreign policy
History on His Shoulders
To divine what Iran’s new President wants from the world, look at a 2,600-year-old artifact

LETTERS
Prison’s Dilemma (Conversation)

WORLD
A Turn in Tehran (Iran)
A rare visit to Iran during its surprising election reveals a nation eager to be heard

UNITED STATES
Can Service Save Us?
It just might. By helping returning troops regain their sense of purpose, veterans’ groups are proving that public service is therapeutic
The Horror Upstairs (New Orleans 1973)
The largest known massacre of gay people in U.S. history remains unsolved and little understood

THE CULTURE
Prince of Light (Art)
How artist James Turrell conquered the heavens
June 24, 2013 | Vol. 181, No. 24

COVER
The Geeks Who Leak (United States)
The President calls them a threat to national security. The Internet calls them heroes. A new wave of hacktivists is changing the way we handle secrets

VIEWPOINT
Al-Qaeda vs. Hizballah
The world’s most fearsome terrorist groups are facing off in Syria. That’s bad news for everyone

BUSINESS
Tower of Power (Breakthrough)
With the California desert as its testing ground, Ivanpah, set to be the biggest solar-thermal plant in the world, is out to prove that renewable energy can work on a massive scale

LETTERS
Tragedy in Oklahoma (Conversation)

WORLD
Perils of Intervention (Mali)
It took France just 19 days to defeat Islamist militants in Mali. Keeping the country stable is proving much harder. Sound familiar?

COMMENTARY
Cleaning Up China (The Curious Capitalist)
This activist is taking on government-backed polluters with a new playbook for change
Hail, President. Well Met (Worldview)
In small but important ways, Obama and Xi moved the needle on U.S.-China relations

SOCIETY
The New American Way of Death (Cremation)
By 2017, 1 out of 2 Americans will choose cremation over burial. Our changing attitude toward this final rite of passage says everything about the way we live now
June 17, 2013 | Vol. 181, No. 23

COVER
How China Sees The World (World)
Under an assertive new ruler, Beijing wants to be treated like a world power. But many of Xi Jinping’s own people are not so sure about his China Dream

WORLD
Left Behind (Afghanistan)
Well ahead of the international troop withdrawal in 2014, aid is starting to shrink. Can Afghanistan cope?
On the Inside (Venezuela)
Prisons are Venezuela’s shame: filthy, overcrowded and lawless. Many are run by inmates, who impose a brutal control on the chaos. An exclusive look behind the prison walls

LETTERS
Jolie’s Choice (Conversation)

VIEWPOINT
No More, Mr. Tough Guy
With his arrogant response to protests, Turkey’s Prime Minister endangers his own legacy
The Least Bad Option
Iran’s voters get a democratic choice, but only between two kinds of authoritarianism

UNITED STATES
Hacking Politics (Silicon Valley Activism)
Silicon Valley’s young guns changed the world, and with billions in the bank, they are looking to do the same to politics. Their first move: Hire all the lobbyists they can

ESSAY
Y Indins Spl Gud?
The Indian domination of spelling bees may be hard to explain ― but it’s easy to enjoy
June 10, 2013 | Vol. 181, No. 22

COVER
Why Gitmo Will Never Close (United States)
President Obama wants to shut down the controversial prison but not the policies it has come to represent

WORLD
Faith and the Campus (Egypt)
Islamists, secularists, democrats and generals all want to shape Cairo’s al-Azhar University. The outcome of their tussle could determine the future of Egypt

LETTERS
Generation ’Me’ (Conversation)

UNITED STATES
His Kind of Town (Rahm Emanuel)
Rahm Emanuel left the white house to run a broke, violence-plagued city, and he’s having the time of his life

VIEWPOINT
Per Favore, Put the Euro to a Vote
Italians should get to decide whether they want to keep Europe’s troubled currency

THE CULTURE
From Gold to Green (Environment)
E-commerce titan Jack Ma is turning his attention to cleaning up China’s pollution
June 3, 2013 | Vol. 181 No. 21

COVER
16 Minutes (United States / Oklahoma)
For the people of Moore, Okla., that was the difference between life and death

COMMENTARY
The Coming Corporate Crackdown (The Curious Capitalist)
Apple is facing tough questions over its skill at avoiding taxes ― and that’s only the beginning

PROFILE
Cameron’s Gamble
Britain’s Prime Minister is fighting to keep his country in Europe. It may cost him his political life

LETTERS
Freedom and Safety (Conversation)

WORLD
The Scramble for Burma
Investors size up opportunities in the newly open nation, even as it struggles to implement political and economic reform

Down and Out in Saudi Arabia
The oil-rich kingdom is one of the richest countries in the world ― but millions of Saudis live in poverty

VIEWPOINT
Democracy’s Islamist Defenders
Tunisia again leads the way in the Arab world as its government cracks down on extremists

THE CULTURE
Serena’s Heir (Sports)
Sloane Stephens might be America’s next great tennis star
May 27, 2013 | Vol. 181, No. 20

COVER
The Angelina Effect (Health /Cancer)
Her preventive mastectomy raises important issues about genes, health and risk

COMMENTARY
America the Isolated? (Worldview)
Hardly. Contrary to conservative complaints, the U.S. is fully ― and smartly ― involved overseas

UNITED STATES
Auditing the IRS
How the agency everyone hates went rogue

LETTERS
The 100 Most Influential People (Conversation)

WORLD
The Youtube War (Syria)
In Syria’s sectarian conflict, fighters on both sides are committing gruesome atrocities ― and showing them off online

In Tamerlan’s Footsteps (Dagestan)
Was the alleged Boston bomber radicalized in Dagestan, his ancestral homeland? A visit to the Russian republic reveals a more complex story

SOCIETY
The End of Alimony (Divorce)
The American divorce is undergoing its biggest change in decades. Call it the revenge of the second wives

ESSAY
Hope and Change, Pakistani Style
A peaceful handover of power and the emergence of a new political player? It’s a start

May 20, 2013 | Vol. 181, No. 19

COVER
The New Greatest Generation (Society)
Why Millennials will save us all

WORLD
Obama’s Syria Nightmare
What if Assad’s WMDs fall into the wrong hands?

Syria: Intervention Is In Our Interest

Intervention Will Only Make It Worse

Worked to Death
Neither the global outrage over Bangladesh’s latest textile tragedy nor threats of a boycott will improve conditions for workers. Only public pressure on politicians can make real change happen

India’s States of Excellence
As one of the world’s fastest-growing economies slows, a handful of states are bucking the national trend. Here’s how

VIEWPOINT
Liberties, Excesses, Fragility
Weak government has plunged the Fifth Republic into crisis and kindled talk of another French revolution

BUSINESS
Blood Work (Breakthrough)
Finding new cures means cracking the body’s complex proteins. So scientists are turning to big data

ESSAY
India Doesn’t Need Another Gandhi
And it’s time for the other democracies of Asia to get over their dynastic fixations too

LETTERS
Paradox of Progress (Conversation)
May 13, 2013 | Vol. 182, No. 1

COVER
What They’ll Wear to the Revolution (Japan)
Uniqlo’s well-made, well-priced casual clothing has become a global retail phenomenon. Can its iconoclastic CEO bring some of that magic to Japan?

VIEWPOINT
Time to Give Kim a Call
Washington’s diplomatic strategy with Pyongyang has failed. Direct negotiations may bear more fruit

SOCIETY
Twilight at the Track (Horse Racing)
Racecourses are closing, purses are dwindling, and breeders are finding other work. Saving thoroughbred racing will require innovation, technology and above all, a love of Horses

COMMENTARY
False Spring
The Middle East’s squabbling liberals have failed to take advantage of the revolution they helped lead

All the Old, Familiar Faces
Can the Establishment figures who dominate Italy’s new government enact much needed reforms?

UNITED STATES
Homeland Insecurity
Is the U.S. willing to do what it would take to stop every homegrown terrorist?

The Fall and Rise of Mark Sanford
Can a onetime conservative hero climb back from disgrace? In South Carolina, anything is possible
April 29, 2013 | Vol. 181, No. 15

COVER
Titans (TIME 100)
Leaders (TIME 100)
Icons (TIME 100)
Pioneers (TIME 100)
Artists (TIME 100)
EDITOR’S DESK
Covering the 100 (To Our Readers)
Seven portraits introduce our annual edition of the world’s most influential people

COMMENTARY
Listing Under the Influence (The Awesome Column)
I dig through 10 years of TIME 100 picks to see how often the editors got it right ― or wrong

BRIEFING
Origin Stories (Behind The 100)

Where the 2013 TIME 100 were born
Influence Times Two (Behind The 100)

The list’s most powerful couples
Influence Index (Behind The 100)

Ranking the 100’s sales, deals and spending
Spheres of Influence (Behind The 100)

How many the 100 command
Social Issues (Behind The 100)

What our influencers have buzzed about
Power Tools (Behind The 100)

What helps our influencers create
The Connections (Behind The 100)

How our influencers influence one another
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