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British Public Expects Big Brother Crime Fighting Techniques In The 21st Century
An astonishing MORI survey, carried out on behalf of the National Neighbourhood Watch Association (NNWA), has revealed that the British public expects the fight against crime in the 21st Century to go much further than ever before in using the latest technological advances. The survey shows that fully 75% of the population expect that DNA records will be held by the police on every person in Britain before the end of the next century.
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The Generation Technology Forgot
Which? Online Over 55s survey reveals surprising numbers of silver surfers in Britain
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Children Put Others First
Children want Tony Blair to provide better care for children and tackle homelessness, according to a survey released by UNICEF, the United Nations Children's Fund, today.
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'Its OK Granny, You Spend Your Savings And Enjoy Yourself', Says Great Britain
A vast majority - 85 per cent - of the British public agrees that older people should spend their savings on enjoying themselves. A mere seven per cent disagree.
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The Economist - British Identity
MORI survey for the Economist conducted September 1999 on national identity, regional devolution and attitudes towards the USA, France and Germany
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Britain Gears Up For First Cyber Christmas: One In Three Internet Users Are Looking To Buy Presents Online
Santa Swaps Sleigh For Surfboard, UK To Splash Out Festive 450m Over Web
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Political Attitudes in Great Britain for October 1999
Q1 How would you vote if there were a General Election tomorrow?
(If undecided or refused at Q1)
Q2 Which party are you most inclined to support?
Base: 1,965 -
Grey Power: The Changing Face
Society has a preoccupation with youth. Perhaps understandably the young are treasured and
nurtured as `our future', parents put the needs of their children before their own, voters and
governments demand education, education, education - it is the age `to be' and `to look'. -
50 Per Cent Of Male Workers Suffer From PMT
Pre-Millennium Tension Widespread in British Businesses According to Latest Research
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Socio-Cultural Currents Affecting Heritage Site Visit Considerations or 'I didn't join English Heritage to be a Salesman'
My day job is the study of the British, the public generally, the electorate, in political terms (although opinion polls that you see in the newspapers and on television is but 1% of our turnover - that's right, 1%, of MORI's turnover - but 99% of the publicity).