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One in three globally report rising crime, violence in their neighborhood
In the past year, just under half say the level of crime in their neighborhood stayed the same, while few say crime has decreased.
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Unlock Brand Success with ESG
Are you a brand, marketing or sustainability manager? Yes? Then this event is for you!
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How research can help understand and close the gap in inequality
In our latest white paper 'More equal than others', we delve into the challenges posed by inequality, highlighting its various dimensions and shedding light on the imperative for proactive efforts to address it head-on.
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Pride month 2023: 9% of adults identify as LGBT+
Public opinion across 30 countries is widely favorable to protecting transgender people from employment and housing discrimination, but divided on other measures
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What Worries the World – May 2023
Inflation has now been the top global concern in our What Worries the World survey for the last 14 months.
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Half of the public across 29 countries think their country is in recession
A latest wave of the Ipsos Global Inflation Monitor finds in 26 of 29 countries more people think their country is in recession than think it is not. Almost two-thirds expect inflation will continue to rise over the next year, while one-third expect their disposable income to fall.
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Global consumer confidence rises to highest point in sixteen months
All four sub-indices show significant gains as sentiment rises across much of Europe.
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Two global religious divides: geographic and generational
Ipsos Global Advisor survey reveals changes in beliefs and attitudes toward religion among both high-income and emerging countries and across age groups.
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Data Dive: How motherhood is viewed around the world
In five infographics, we uncover how people feel about everything from whether being a mother/wife is a woman’s main role in society to stigma surrounding fathers taking the lead with childrearing.
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We need to talk about generations - Understanding generations
Marketing is overrun with stereotypes, hot takes and clichés. Some of the most enduring in the first two decades of this century centred on the post-1980 millennials, who were proclaimed as a new generation that would completely disrupt business.