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Data Dive: How women and men feel about abortion issues
In five points, we look at how people across 29 countries feel about everything from if, and when, abortion should be legal to who, if anyone, should be punished when it’s illegal.
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What worries the world - August 2023
Inflation has now been the top global concern in our What Worries the World survey for the last 17 months. However, worry about rising prices has declined for three months in a row, having dropped 3pp from June.
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Public-Private Health Care
Join Ipsos’ Darrell Bricker for The Globe and Mail’s series of national events focused on approaches to improve patient access, experience, equity and outcomes across public and private systems in Canada.
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More Than Half (56%) of Canadians Consider Canada’s Armed Forces to be Old and Antiquated
Three-quarters (75%) think Canada should increase its military spending, but six in ten (59%) still consider them among the best in the world.
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The Up (and Down) Side of ESG Scrutiny
As climate change, economic strife, and community malaise hit closer to home, Canadians are feeling expected to align their wallet with their social conscience. While price, product, and service will always be key, how companies measure up on ESG initiatives is going to be a much bigger factor in future purchase decisions.
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What Worries the World – July 2023
Inflation has now been the top global concern in our What Worries the World survey for the last 16 months.
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Applying cultural transferability analysis to ESG
The three cultural dimensions that are shaping attitudes, perceptions and behaviour around ESG in the local markets
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Women We Admire: Embracing Equity for Better Outcomes
Women We Admire is a membership organization comprised of the most accomplished women executives and leaders across the U.S. and Canada.
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ESG – a time for leadership, focus and communication, but above all action
Concluding from the latest Ipsos ESG Council report, it's increasingly clear ESG's role as an agent for positive change.
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Do and don’ts for understanding generations
The more we look at generations the less we know about them. That's why it is important to see the trees in the data forest.