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New global study: Today’s views that will shape tomorrow’s food
Around the globe, people are more likely to think that their access to healthy and quality food will increase in the future, but that it will come at a price, according to a new Global Advisor survey from Ipsos. Those surveyed are more than twice as likely to say that the costs of food will get worse in the future than believe it will improve.
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YouthView: Understanding risk behaviours for meningitis among young people
While meningococcal meningitis is relatively uncommon, it is unpredictable, may progress very rapidly and can lead to death in as little as 24 hours of first symptoms.<sup>1,2</sup>
According to one study, the bacteria that can cause the disease are carried asymptomatically in the nasopharynx of up to almost one in four (24%) 19-year-olds; although for most it will not cause the disease.<sup>3</sup> -
Entrepreneurialism is Alive and Well and Taking on Today’s Social Challenges
Across 24 countries, 28% of adults have started a business and 9% have started a charity of community group.
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What Worries the World - September 2018
New global poll finds four concerns top the world’s worry list: Unemployment, poverty/social inequality, crime/violence and financial/political corruption.
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Ipsos Issues Index September 2018: Half see Brexit as the single biggest issue for Britain
Half now see Brexit as the single biggest issue for the country – the highest score for any single issue since the economy in 2011
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Ipsos Update - October 2018
Welcome to Ipsos Update – our monthly selection of research and thinking from Ipsos teams around the world. October’s edition features new papers on agile research, surviving disruption, and creating strong branded memories in ads, as well as reports on Kenya, populism, and young people globally.
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Global Business Influencers 2018
Global Business Influencers represent less than 1% of the population. But, taking into account their influence, spending power, and the corporate budgets they control, they are a disproportionately important audience for B2B marketers.
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Beyond Populism? Two Years After
Two years on from Brexit and the election of Donald Trump, a major new Ipsos survey across 25 countries, revisits the topic of populism and ‘system is broken’ sentiment.
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Press release Affluent Africa 2018: How digital is driving media growth in Africa
The 5th Affluent Survey Africa, released by Ipsos on September 13th, revealed:
• Despite internet penetration in the continent lagging behind other regions of the world, Africa’s Affluent population have embraced digital technology more rapidly than their European counterparts: many more of them are watching TV on their tablets, computers and smartphones and more of them read their newspapers digitally.
• International TV channels now enjoy a higher reach amongst the Affluent population than national channels
• Social media is now considered the first port of call for news amongst a substantial proportion of the Affluent population -
Fake News, Filter Bubbles and Post-Truth are Other People’s Problems…
A major new Ipsos study of over 19,000 people in 27 countries, and part of our long-running series on misperceptions of key social realities – The Perils of Perception – highlights how we think fake news, filter bubbles and post-truth are things that affect other people, much more than ourselves. But the majority also say they regularly see fake news, and nearly half say they’ve believed a fake story before finding out it’s fake.