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Ipsos Equalities Index 2024: More than a quarter of Gen Z men think efforts to promote equality have gone too far
The 2024 edition of the Ipsos Equalities Index finds 27% of Generation Z men across 29 countries think efforts to promote equality for all groups of people have gone too far.
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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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Data dive: Gen Z myths vs. realities
In five infographics, we uncover some surprising opinions of those coming of age amid climate change, inflation, pandemic and war.
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Ipsos teams up with UN Women-convened Unstereotype Alliance to fight harmful stereotypes
The Unstereotype Alliance campaign is the result of an Ipsos survey carried out across Brazil, South Africa, Turkey, the US and the UK revealing that close to three-quarters (73%) of people will witness stereotyping, yet under a third (30%) will actively challenge it.
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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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WRD 2022: 78% globally agree that people should be able to take refuge in other countries
New Ipsos survey shows greater compassion for forcibly displaced as war in Ukraine wears on.
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Positive impact of intersectionality in advertising
The Unstereotype Alliance today released its new report “Beyond Gender 2: The Impact of Intersectionality in Advertising,” produced with support from LIONS and research conducted by Ipsos.
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Human Rights in 2018
Globally, only Four in Ten People Say Everyone in Their Country Enjoys the Same Basic Human Rights.
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Ipsos Update - July 2018
Welcome to Ipsos Update – our monthly selection of research and thinking from Ipsos teams around the world. July’s edition features new papers on ethnography, audience measurement and food waste, as well as new global reports on the inclusiveness of nationalities and artificial intelligence.
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BBC Global Survey: A world Divided?
Three-quarters around the world say their country’s society is divided – and the majority think their country is now more divided than it was 10 years ago, especially in Europe. Differences in political views are seen as the greatest cause of tension, followed by differences between rich and poor. However, despite these divisions, the majority of people in most countries agree that people across the world have more things in common than things that make them different.