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Ipsos Update - May 2021
Climate change, vacations and vaccine passports, President Biden’s first 100 days and the latest trends in South Korean society are some of the featured topics in this month’s round-up of research and thinking from Ipsos around the world.
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Earth Day 2021: Only 3 in 10 Britons think the Government has a clear plan to tackle climate change
In Great Britain, as around the world, less than a third believe their government has a clear plan to combat climate change. The latest Earth Day research from Ipsos, in partnership with the Centre for Climate Change and Social Transformations (CAST), explores who Britons believe to be responsible; what individuals are willing to do and how COVID-19 has changed this; and highlights the tendency to focus on lower-impact actions over big changes.
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7 in 10 Britons say they understand what they must do to fight against climate change, but few can identify the best ways to make an impact
Britons say they understand what actions they need to take to combat climate change, but do they really? The latest Perils of Perception study by Ipsos looks at how the general public in 30 markets around the world perceive environmental action. We ask them what they might do in their own lives to tackle climate change, and compare the answers to the (sometimes confusing) scientific truth.
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Ipsos Perils of Perception: climate change
Around the world people say they understand what actions they need to take to combat climate change, but do they really?
The latest Perils of Perception study by Ipsos looks at how the general public in 30 markets around the world perceive environmental action. We ask them what they might do in their own lives to tackle climate change, and compare the answers to the (sometimes confusing) scientific truth -
Working through COVID-19: What behaviours will bounce back and what will stick?
Research from Nationwide Building Society and Ipsos reveals tensions over the future of homeworking as employers and employees navigate its benefits and challenges.
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Looking to the future, post pandemic
Over the coming months Ipsos and Perspective Economics will be working with the Nationwide Building Society to help them examine the systemic issues in society and within communities caused as a result of the pandemic.
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What matters to people about the future of the UK landscape? A public dialogue on the future of land-use
Policymakers and land managers will need to consider the public’s views both of long-term risks and the immediate impacts upon their everyday lives, according to a major new public dialogue project by Ipsos for the Royal Society.
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Only one in five believe early years are most important for a child’s development.
A new 28 country study by Ipsos finds that one in five people (18%) believe the period from the start of pregnancy to age 5 is the most important period of a child and young person’s life for health and happiness in adulthood. The highest proportion of people say all periods are equally important (35%). This is the first time that a global comparative survey looking at perceptions of the early years in different countries has taken place and builds off the work Ipsos conducted in the UK for The Royal Foundation in 2019 /2020.
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Almost half of working Britons would get more satisfaction from a ‘green job’ than they do their current job
Nicola Moss looks at new research from the Ipsos KnowledgePanel about Britons' aspirations to work in the green economy.