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Daily Mail Poll on Swearing on Television
79% of Britons now think that there is more swearing on television than there was 10 years ago, while only 3% believe there is less and 13% think that the level is about the same, according to an Ipsos poll for the Daily Mail.
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Ipsos Social Research Institute launches today
Ipsos, one of the world's largest research companies, today announces the launch of a major global initiative: the Ipsos Social Research Institute.
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Our Nation's Civic Health
A new Ipsos report produced for Communities and Local Government takes a comprehensive look at Civic Health across the country.
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Architecture And Design Scotland
The overall aim of the survey was to carry out a comprehensive survey of the way in which local authority and national park authority stakeholders perceive A+DS and to explore their experience of the organisation's Design Review service.
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Worcester's Weblog - Too early to call?
Sir Robert Worcester calls on pundits not to jump the gun and call the election too early. In this piece he explains the numerous issues and events that could still have a dramatic effect on who the country chooses as its next government.
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Finding the good from within: teachers as role models
This article was written by Ben Page and Sally Panayiotou from Ipsos and produced for Navigate as a Special Report.
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The Business Elite
Ever since the Business Elite series - formerly BRS - began in Europe in 1973, the surveys have been about understanding the most senior business people; those key decision makers and opinion formers within the largest companies.
The following thought piece provides unique insight into this elusive audience as they direct their companies through these unprecedented times. -
Recession is the catalyst for a decade of business change - CBI
New research for the Confederation of British Industry (CBI), released at their annual conference on 23rd November, and conducted by Ipsos, shows how companies are learning from their traumatic experiences through the recession.
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People, Perceptions and Place
This report helps local public services and partnerships better understand what factors affect key outcomes such as satisfaction with quality of life, community cohesion, feelings of influence and ratings of local services.
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Activating Empowerment
This report provides a detailed account of many of the mechanisms local authorities and public
services can use to empower local communities. Activating Empowerment shows how empowerment mechanisms - such as participatory budgeting and deliberative forms of engagement - have the potential to restructure the relationship between service providers and users, state and citizen, and with it the very nature of political decision-making in the twenty first century.