Europe

Berliners see red

Switzerland

Backlash?

From the archives

Migrants have posed a challenge to Schengen from its very inception

Two decades ago, The Economist looked at Europe's conflicted relationship with outsiders

From the archive

The ascent of British man

We looked at a cross-section of Britain's ruling class, and compared it with the same cross-section 20 years ago. The results are shocking

From the archive

Talking to Gaidar: From the hot seat

From 1992: Yegor Gaidar, number two in the Russian government, is in charge of the second-biggest economic experiment in history, his country's reconversion to market forces. The Economist found him relaxed about the prospects of overcoming resistance to reform, of beating inflation and of successful privatisation

From the archive

What's in a deal

How Maastricht will change Europeans' lives

From the archive

Sprechen Sie Maastricht?

From the archive

The deal is done

From the archive

What is to be done?

To clean up the shambles left by communist mismanagement, Eastern Europe must take a swift, dramatic leap to private ownership and a market system. West Europeans must help it do so, welcoming it as partner in a unified European market. So says Jeffrey Sachs, Harvard professor and economic adviser to the governments of Poland and Yugoslavia

From the archive

Happy birthday

The Treaty of Rome was signed 30 years ago on March 25th. Our Brussels correspondent looks at how the European Community has grown up, and at the decisions facing it as it approaches middle age