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Monarchy/Royal Family Trends - Prince Charles as King
Q On balance, do you think that Prince Charles will make a good king or a bad king when he comes to the throne in future?
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Monarchy Poll, April 2006
Ipsos conducted research on behalf of The Sun Newspaper looking at the British public's attitudes towards the Monarchy.
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Public Services And NHS Poll
Ipsos conducted research on behalf of The Sun Newspaper looking at perceptions of the National Health Service and public spending.
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Attitudes Towards Teenagers And Crime
Some of the key national findings from the Dispatches programme are taken from a survey with 1,001 adults across Great Britain in March 2006. Other findings relating to specific local authority areas relate to analysis of BVPI (Best Value Performance Indicator) data from 2003/04.
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Ipsos Political Monitor March 2006
Questions on voting intention, satisfaction with party leaders, the key issues facing Britain, economic optimism, party identification, past voting behaviour, immigration, drink driving and personal finance.
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Deloitte / Government Delivery Index
Two in five British adults (38%) think that the Government's policies will improve the state of Britain's economy in the long-term, while 48% disagree. Fewer are optimistic about the public services, with one in three (32%) thinking that the Government's policies will improve public services, while a majority (55%) disagree with this.
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The Public And Privatised Rail
After 10 years of privatised rail, the British public are still to be convinced that a train journey is better value for money or safer than under British Rail. New research[1] from Ipsos shows that half (52%) of British people say they have a favourable view of the rail sector as a whole, while 30% are unfavourable. As National Passenger statistics show the highest level of customer satisfaction since Hatfield, in terms of the overall quality of the service, more than a quarter (28%) feel the service is better now than when it was nationalised compared to one in five (21%) who feel it is worse.
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Computer Games For Learning
NESTA Futurelab, a leading organisation in educational technology, commissioned Ipsos to conduct a survey investigating teachers' attitudes to mainstream computer games as part of their research project Teaching with Games, which is funded by Electronic Arts (EA).
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Saddam Hussein Trial International Poll
Half the UK public believes that, if convicted, Saddam Hussein should spend the rest of his life in prison (52%), rather than face the death penalty (42%), according to a new poll by Ipsos Public Affairs for Associated Press. In eight of the nine countries surveyed more people support life imprisonment over the death penalty (Spain 72%/14%, Italy 70%/20%, Germany 60%/34%, South Korea 56%/25%, France 53%/38%, Canada 48%/38%, Mexico 45%/26%). Only in the USA do more people support death penalty (57%) over life imprisonment (36%).
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Attitudes To London Policing Survey
Ipsos interviewed 1,002 adults aged 18+ in London by telephone between 14-17 February 2006. Data are weighted to match the profile of the London population.