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Ipsos iris: Total understanding of UK online audiences

Ipsos iris: Total understanding of UK online audiences

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Modern Masculinities

Modern Masculinities

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Be Distinctive Britain

Be Distinctive Britain

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  • Family Survey

    IT High Tech Jobs For The Boys

    Information technology is regarded more highly by boys than girls as a potentially rewarding career, a MORI survey has revealed.
  • Survey

    Petrol Buyers Would Boycott Esso

    A newly published MORI poll for the Stop Esso Campaign shows 53 percent of petrol buyers would boycott Esso because of the company's attempts to block action on global warming. Figures for Esso's existing customers are virtually identical. A telephone survey by Greenpeace of leading supermarkets revealed that ASDA, Tesco and Morrisons do not supply Esso fuels, Safeway's does supply Esso fuels and Sainsbury's refuse to reveal its suppliers.
  • Politics Survey

    Times 2001 Campaign Polls Wave 2

    MORI's second weekly election campaign poll for The times
  • Politics Survey

    Tory 'Meltdown'?

    Three weeks today the country will go to the polling booths and elect the next government. Never before has the outcome seemed so certain. So far nine polls with fieldwork taken after the announcement of the date of the general election have been published. All nine have projected seat calculations showing an increase in the Labour majority in the House of Commons over all other parties.
  • Politics Survey

    General Election 2001 : Constituency Polls — How Not To Do It

    Today's Daily Record carries polling results from six marginal seats in Scotland, and compares the results with those that it published in the same six marginal seats last week; both polls were conducted by Scottish Opinion. All very well, except that the first poll interviewed only 744 respondents in total (an average of 124 per constituency), and today's interviewed 911 (average about 152).
  • Politics Survey

    General Election 2001 : Comparing The Parties

    The answers to three questions included on the MORI survey being published in The Times tomorrow reveal a good deal about the public attitudes to the state of the parties, and go some way to explaining the cavernous gap that still exists between the parties (and which, indeed, may even have widened slightly in the last week).