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Competence matters. Perceptions of leader competence in handling of COVID-19 tend to mirror country experience.
In a new report ‘Political Trust and the COVID-19 Crisis: Pushing Populism to the Backburner', researchers from the Universities of Southampton, Canberra and Oxford find that perceptions of the threat posed by the coronavirus and performance of political leaders tend to correspond to how the crisis has unfolded in each country.
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Women finding it harder than men to stay positive during the pandemic – particularly working mums
Working mums are most likely to feel the strains of the crisis and women are more likely to be concerned about the emotional and mental toll of the pandemic.
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Abortions amid COVID-19: How women’s rights are being impacted by the pandemic
About 70% say abortions should be permitted ̶ down 5% from 2014 and lower than when poll began
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New data reveals how UK would be prepared to live if COVID vaccine can’t be found
Large proportions of the UK public say they would accept most children being home-schooled, employees being able to choose whether they work from home and bans on public events in front of live audiences being in place for the “very long term”, if a vaccine or treatment that deals with the threat of COVID-19 cannot be found, according to a new study
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Globally 7 in 10 favour allowing abortion - Ipsos Global Advisor survey
Seven in ten adults worldwide (70%) and eight in ten (83%) in Britain say abortion should be permitted, according to a new Ipsos Global Advisor survey of nearly 17,500 men and women from 25 countries.
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Ipsos Research Highlights - 14 August 2020
In this week's Ipsos Research Highlights we explore how pessimistic the British public are about the next 12 months, share our latest findings from the coronavirus home testing programme, as well as Britons' top concerns.
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Largest home antibody testing programme for COVID-19 publishes findings
With Imperial College London, Ipsos has undertaken a huge study across England to find Covid-19 antibody prevalence.
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A fifth of the British public feel more at risk of cybercrime and fraud since lockdown
New research from Ipsos shows around a fifth of the British public feel more at risk of certain types of cybercrime and fraud since the Prime Minister announced lockdown due to the Coronavirus on 23 March.