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What Worries the World – May 2022
Inflation remains the top global worry after rising for tenth month in a row.
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Earth Day 2022: few can correctly identify actions which are best at cutting carbon emissions
New research by Ipsos shows people around the world are not very likely to make environmentally friendly changes that would have the most impact on cutting carbon emissions. Less than half say they are likely to make changes such as eating fewer dairy products (41%), eating less meat (44%), changing their household heating system to a low carbon system (44%), despite these being some of the most effective ways in cutting carbon emissions.
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IWD 2022: Women are more likely to perceive institutional bias against them
Women are more likely to perceive institutional bias against women than men, particularly governments and social media.
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Social listening: Higher education’s competitive advantage
As competition among universities rises, many are turning to social listening to attract students and grow their brands.
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Despite the increase in extreme climate events, citizen mobilisation for climate change is not growing
A key player in the energy sector on an international level that has committed to the goal of reaching carbon neutrality by 2050, EDF presents the findings of an opinion study of groundbreaking scope conducted for the 3rd consecutive year by Ipsos in 30 countries across five continents, covering two-thirds of the world’s population and featuring the biggest CO2 producers. Every year, EDF publishes an international status report on opinions, knowledge, expectations and levels of engagement in relation to climate change, as matter for reflection and to contribute to the constructive search for solutions for the future.
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Most workers support workplace vaccine and mask mandates
The return to the pre-COVID workplace is highly uneven across countries and demographic groups.
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Climate Change – Responsibility & Actions
The majority of New Zealanders (57%) have stated that if the government does not act now to combat climate change, it will be failing the people of New Zealand. Notably, just 37% of believe that the New Zealand government has a clear plan in place for how the government, businesses and people themselves are going to work together to tackle climate change, according to a new study from Ipsos.
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Ipsos Update – September 2021
This month we feature new research on women in advertising, wellbeing in India, alongside updates on world opinion on globalisation, economic recovery, exercise and sports, and more.
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Global consumer sentiment growth has nearly halted
Consumer confidence is down in the world’s two largest economies
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Sentiment about globalization cooler than before the pandemic across the world
Global survey conducted with the World Economic Forum highlights mixed views on international trade