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Women, Power and Money
This regular FleishmanHillard study is co-sponsored by Hearst Magazines and conducted by Ipsos MediaCT. The fifth wave of the study covers, for the first time, the views of women in the UK, Germany, France and China, alongside those from the United States.
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The 2013 Lloyd's Risk Index
The Lloyd's Risk Index 2013 is based on a global survey of over 500 C-suite and board level executives conducted by Ipsos for Lloyd's during April and May 2013.
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Public views of Police Scotland
Following the merger of Scotland's police forces, a majority of the Scottish public think that it will make no difference to the way their local area is policed.
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Ipsos Global @dvisor: Corporate Responsibility
Four in ten (37%) employees in 24 countries indicate it is `very important' for their own employers to be `responsible to society and the environment'.
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Muslims, benefits and teenage pregnancies: the perils of perception
The scale of our collective error is startling as our survey for the Royal Statistics Society and King's College London shows, writes Bobby Duffy and Hetan Shah in The New Statesman.
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Perceptions are not reality
A new survey by Ipsos for the Royal Statistical Society and King's College London highlights how wrong the British public can be on the make-up of the population and the scale of key social policy issues.
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The NHS at 65
As the NHS turns 65, we reflect on public opinion and attitudes to the NHS and the service it provides.
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Scottish universities and reputation management
Dr Sara Davidson asks why Scottish institutions aren’t performing better in reputational terms and is there more that can be done to address this?
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`Housing going digital': a challenging opportunity
Social responsibility has been a defining principle for many housing associations but being commercially minded is becoming ever more important.
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The odds are still against Scottish independence, but every vote will count
The closer the contest is, the more likely radical changes to the devolution settlement become, writes Mark Diffley in the New Statesman.