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Over One Third of Adults Think the Scottish Parliament will Improve the Scottish Economy
The most detailed and complete analysis of the Scottish economy carried out for many years is published today, coinciding with a new poll which shows most Scots remain to be persuaded that their economic prospects can be improved by the Scottish Parliament.
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Parents Challenge Employers On Gap Between 'Rhetoric And Reality' On Help With Childcare
MORI survey for National Childcare Week reveals parents' experiences in the workplace and views on the National childcare Strategy
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MORI Scotland / Sunday Herald Poll
As you may know, you will have two votes in the election for the Scottish Parliament. The first is for a named candidate standing in your area, just like in a general election. The other vote is for a party, and people will be elected from lists that the parties put forward, according to the proportion of the total number of votes that each party wins.
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Europe: The State of Public Opinion
In this article I argue that public opinion is important, real, and in the run up to the Maastricht Treaty was mismanaged to the point of neglect. This was also true in relation to the European movement towards the ICG, following after the Maastricht Treaty ratification process.
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Political Attitudes in Scotland for March 1998
Research study conducted for the Mail on Sunday Newspaper
MORI interviewed a representative quota sample of 862 adults aged 18+ across Scotland
between 26-27 March 1998. -
The Power of Public Opinion: Princess Diana: 1961-1997
The power of public opinion was vividly demonstrated recently in Britain by an event which grabbed the attention of the entire world. Princess Diana, an icon of our time with probably the highest awareness level of anyone in the world, was killed in a car crash and at the age of 36, struck down in the prime of life. Her life was measured in the thousands of extra copies of magazines and newspapers in every language published, when she was the cover picture. Her death became a world-wide public event, with millions who had never met her feeling a personal bereavement.
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Growing Public Acceptance for Tuition Fees - CVCP
A recent MORI survey, for the Committee of Vice-Chancellors and Principals of the Universities of the United Kingdom (CVCP),
reveals that 83% of parents, who expressed an opinion are prepared to contribute towards the university tuition costs of
their children. This compares to 38% in 1991. Only 17% said that they were not prepared to make a contribution. -
Public Support for Higher Education
The principle of government funding for higher education is sacrosanct according to
the British public, eighty eight per cent believe that government spending on higher
education is an investment for the future. -
Who, What, Where and Why
The election is approaching, and we are frequently being asked a similar series of questions — or, occasionally, discovering that some have an alarming misunderstanding about what we do. So, with apologies to those of our readers to whom this is already obvious, let us begin at the beginning.