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What Scotland gets wrong - the perils of perception
Ipsos Scotland’s new Perils of Perception survey highlights how large the gap is between people’s perceptions of some key issues and features of Scotland’s population and the reality.
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Ipsos Research Highlights - January 2018
Ipsos's Research Highlights for January 2018 includes rising concern about inflation, a lack of confidence in the Government's negotiations with the EU from FTSE 500 and how to avoid an epic fail.
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What are the reputational and regulatory risks for businesses that automate?
Evidence from our Key Influencer and General Public surveys shows that MPs and their constituents are at odds over automation — with diverging views on the desirability of 'minimum human quotas' or an 'automation tax'.
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Most don’t think Donald Trump should be invited to the Royal Wedding
Headline voting intention: Labour 42% (+3 points), Conservatives 39% (+2 points), Liberal Democrats 9% (nc).
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Monarchy/Royal Family Trends - Most Liked Members of the Royal Family
Q Which two or three members of the Royal Family do you like the most?
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Show me the money
In a highly private topic matter tied up in the desire to project a certain self externally, untangling the complexities of financial management from the cultural eco-system it sits within has never been so important. Using two ethnographic case studies, we reveal the differences between what we say we do, and what we actually do.
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EU’s heart might be open, but Britain’s isn’t
The UK isn’t changing its mind about Brexit says Ben Page in Politico.
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Despite growing financial pressures, Londoners continue to band together
A poll of Londoners on behalf of London Councils
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ICURe: evaluation of pilot programme
A mixed methods evaluation of the Innovation to Commercialisation of University Research (ICURe) pilot programme, the results of which directly supported an £8m expansion of the programme.
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Britons' predictions for 2018
The latest Ipsos Global @dvisor poll was carried out in 28 countries around the world at the end of 2017. It asked over 21,500 online adults aged under 64 their predictions for 2018.