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Ipsos Update – April 2024
Global happiness, gender equality, ESG… Ipsos Update explores the latest research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos teams around the world.
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Data Dive: Coronavirus crisis leaves scars, lessons in its wake
Four years after the WHO first declared a global health emergency we look at how views on everything from inflation to mental health have changed since 2020.
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Global Happiness 2024
The new edition of Ipsos’ Global Happiness report finds there’s been a slight dip in happiness year-on-year as economic and political clouds loom overhead.
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Ipsos Update – March 2024
Populism, UX, Love… Ipsos Update explores the latest research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos teams around the world.
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Hey, adults: What your brand needs to know about the future of teens
What it means to be a teen is changing. So is the world youth live in. This issue explores how the beliefs, attitudes and behaviors of adolescents are evolving in an age of social media, climate change, and economic instability, and what these transformations mean for brands, media and institutions.
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Global predictions for 2024: Optimism is on the rise as more think next year will be better
However, people expect climate change to worsen in 2024, the Ipsos Predictions survey finds
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Data Dive: Gen Z women are struggling the most with stress, mental health issues
In five points, we break down how people around the world are dealing (or not) as the pandemic fades away, war grinds on and sticky inflation sticks around.
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Ipsos Update – November 2023
Health, trust, ESG… Ipsos Update explores the latest and greatest research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos teams around the world.
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Ipsos Update – October 2023
Education, infrastructure, healthcare… Ipsos Update explores the latest and greatest research & thinking on key topics from Ipsos teams around the world.
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Global perspectives on inequality: How people around the world understand fairness
Around the world, inequality is a more salient issue for younger generations, who are also less likely than older people to believe they live in a society that rewards merit and hard work. But there are some important differences between different groups in how inequality is defined, and who is thought to suffer because of it.