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What Worries the World? August 2021
New highs for Coronavirus concern in some countries underscore the unstable pandemic environment.
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Ipsos Update – August 2021
Featured topics include obesity, sustainability, populism, youth skills and the Tokyo Olympics. We also take a closer look at the latest research from Russia and Africa.
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Ipsos Update – July 2021
Discover new global studies on attitudes to refugees, LGBT+ equality, culture wars and sustainable development. Also explore our latest white papers. including a spotlight on Indonesian society.
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What Worries the World – May 2021
Global coronavirus concern is much reduced from this time last year, but it remains top of our worry list and reaches a record high in India.
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Earth day 2021: globally people wonder what's the plan to tackle climate change
A new global study by Ipsos, conducted online among adults across 30 markets between February 19 and March 5, 2021 shows that a Global Market Average of only 31% agree their government has a clear plan in place for how government, businesses and people themselves are going to work together to tackle climate change. A third, 34%, disagree.
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What Worries the World – March 2021
“What Worries the World?”: One year on, COVID-19 remains the greatest global concern.
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Ipsos Update – March 2021
Our monthly round-up of Ipsos research and thinking reflects on the world one year on from Covid-19, looks forward to the world in 2025 and beyond, and presents new white papers on customer experience, product innovation and research methods.
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What Worries the World – February 2021
Almost two-thirds (64%) of the public across 27 countries say things in their country are heading in the wrong direction. Coronavirus remains the number one concern in our global survey – a place it has occupied for almost a year.
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Ipsos Update – February 2021
Our monthly round-up of the latest research and thinking from Ipsos around the world includes new global surveys on life during the pandemic, a new white paper on quality in market research and special features on US and French society.
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Ukrainians' expectations about the influence of countries and international organizations on world affairs and attitudes towards the United States
Most residents of Ukrainian cities expect a positive impact of "Euro-Atlantic" countries and organizations on world affairs in the next decade, while a small proportion of citizens expect this from Russia and Iran (24% and 21%)