The Washington Times

Topic - London School Of Economics

Subscribe to this topic via RSS or ATOM
Related Stories
  • Getty Images/ David Cameron

    TAUBE: A return to conservatism could save the Tory PM

    David Cameron, prime minister of the United Kingdom, doesn't have to face the electorate until May 2015. Yet there is a strong possibility his minority Tory government could fall earlier than expected.

  • Protesters reach palace; Morsi flees

    Egypt's Islamist president fled his palace by the back door Tuesday as riot police used clubs and tear gas to battle thousands of demonstrators protesting his seizure of broad powers that enabled him to push through a draft constitution.

  • BOOK REVIEW: ‘Mick Jagger’

    Philip Norman is a longtime chronicler of Britain's popular music, having written books on, among others, the Beatles, Elton John and the Rolling Stones. Now, in this lengthy but disappointingly insubstantial biography, he focuses on the Rolling Stones' leading light.

  • **FILE** Syrian President Bashar Assad delivers a speech June 3, 2012, at the parliament in Damascus, Syria. (Associated Press/SANA)

    Assad regime crumbling down to core

    Syria's prime minister Monday became the latest and highest-ranking official to defect to the opposition, a sign that divisions within the country are hardening further along sectarian lines.

  • Alawites spurned by rebels in Syria

    Thaer Abboud volunteered to join the rebels fighting to overthrow Syrian President Bashar Assad but got a rude rejection because of his religion.

  • A Free Syrian Army soldier points his weapon and stands on a likeness of Syrian President Bashar Assad in the border town of Azaz, some 20 miles north of Aleppo, Syria. Turkey on Wednesday sealed its border with Syria. (Associated Press)

    Turkey closes blitzed border with Syrian 'no man's land'

    Turkey closed its border with Syria on Wednesday in an attempt to hold back the chaos and lawlessness that has spread along the border, as Syrians flee the intense fighting between rebels and the army of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

  • This citizen journalism image provided by Shaam News Network SNN, purports to show anti-Syrian regime mourners carrying the coffins of Syrian citizens wrapped with Syrian revolutionary flags who were killed by the Syrian forces shelling, in Daraa, southern Syria, Tuesday June 26, 2012.

    U.N. blames regime forces for Syria massacre

    The U.N. singled out government forces Friday for blame in the latest massacre in Syria, a frenzy of killing that raises new questions about whether diplomacy has any chance to end the crisis more than 16 months into the bloodiest revolt of the Arab Spring.

  • Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi (right) receives a picture of her father as a birthday gift after taking part in a round table at the London School of Economics and Political Science in London on Tuesday, June 19, 2012. (AP Photo/Elizabeth Dalziel)

    Myanmar's Suu Kyi visits London, Oxford on U.K. tour

    Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi celebrated her 67th birthday Tuesday at the start of a week-long visit to Britain, telling hundreds of students and academics that time alone will not heal the wounds of her country.

  • Alexis Tsipras, head of the left-wing Syriza Party, waves to his supporters in Athens late Sunday. The party won 72 seats in parliament. (Associated Press)

    Pro-bailout party wins, but future uncertain for Greece

    Parties supporting Greece's financial-bailout package seized victory Sunday in parliamentary elections that had been widely seen as crucial to the country's — and the eurozone's — future, as well as the well-being of the global economy.

  • A Syrian chants slogans during a protest against Syrian President Bashar Assad after prayers on the outskirts of Idlib, Syria, on Friday, June 8, 2012. (AP Photo)

    Both sides deny there's civil war in Syria

    Syrian troops stormed a rebel-held area on the Mediterranean coast Wednesday, driving out opposition fighters and retaking the Haffa region as world leaders debated the mounting violence there and mulled how to quell it.

  • **FILE** British Prime Minister David Cameron (Associated Press)

    U.K.'s Cameron to face media ethics inquiry

    British media ethics inquiry said Friday that Prime Minister David Cameron will give evidence next week, amid questions over his ties to a number of suspects in the country's tabloid phone hacking scandal.

  • Marine Le Pen

    Fringe parties tilting Europe left and right

    Elections across Europe this spring are giving former fringe political parties a boost, as voter anger in Greece, Germany and France translates into bigger gains for the far left and far right.

  • ** FILE ** Anti-government protesters wave Bahraini flags Nov. 25, 2011, during a rally and march that drew tens of thousands to Maqsha, Bahrain, just outside the capital of Manama. Participants in the rally, organized by several opposition societies, waved Bahraini flags along with those of Arab spring countries Syria, Yemen, Jordan, Tunisia and Egypt, while calling for the fall of the Bahraini government, freedom for prisoners and democracy in the Gulf island kingdom. (Associated Press)

    Arab Spring nations in turmoil once again

    What happened to the Arab Spring? The uprisings that swept dictators and autocratic regimes from power last year were supposed to have ushered in a new season of democracy. From Tunisia to Yemen, however, things have gone wrong.

  • ** FILE ** Ken Livingstone of the Labor Party (left) was mayor of London when he lost the 2008 election to Boris Johnson (right) of the Conservative Party. (Associated Press)

    An Olympian choice of contrasting styles in election for London's mayor

    One sports an unruly blond mop, spouts Latin aphorisms and loves to ride his bicycle. The other is a neat, newt-loving socialist who prefers to travel by subway.

More Stories →

Happening Now