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Public Support Holding Steady for Refugees Despite Global Fragility
A new survey by Ipsos, released for World Refugee Day, highlights the resilience of public support for refugees while also revealing significant concerns to be addressed.
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Ipsos Pride Survey 2025: Majority are for anti-discrimination protections, but support slips for several LGBT+ issues
A new Ipsos survey across 26 countries finds the proportion in favour of everything from trans athletes to Pride Month marketing is down since 2021.
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Decoding Misinformation: Why we fall for fake news
Understanding the factors that influence a person's ability to distinguish between real and fake news is crucial to tackling the misinformation crisis.
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Ipsos Update – February 2024
Gender, politics, manufacturing… Ipsos Update explores the latest and research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos teams around the world.
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Elections & social media: the battle against disinformation and trust issues
The reliability of online information being crucial during elections, UNESCO and Ipsos decided to conduct a survey in 16 countries where general elections will be held in 2024, and pose questions specific to this context: do people feel that disinformation have already had an impact on political life in their country? Are they concerned that disinformation will impact the next campaign?
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Building reputation in 2023: the link between corporate reputation and business efficiency
Drawing on data from our latest 24-country Global Reputation Monitor, this paper explores the relationship between a good reputation and better business efficiency.
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Ipsos Update – September 2023
Barbiecore, artificial intelligence, ESG… Ipsos Update explores the latest and greatest research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos teams around the world.
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Ipsos releases Global Trends 2023: A new world disorder
As 2023 opens, we’re entering a new world disorder filled with crises on multiple fronts. The largest Global Trends survey ever, from leading insights firm Ipsos, shows that, globally, 74% agree that their government and public services will do too little to help people in the years ahead.
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Social Media Conundrum
Corporate communicators must determine whether the risks outweigh the rewards of communicating on social media.