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Young Adults And Binge Drinking
Drunk and disorderly: a qualitative study of binge drinking among 18 to 24 year olds.
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Concerns among consumers of Financial Services in Northern Ireland
Consumers of financial services in Northern Ireland have a number of key concerns, as highlighted in a recent survey conducted by MORI Ireland.
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Trust In The Government Low
Trust in the Government is low, with a quarter to a third of us believing that the Government is acting in the public interest in relation to each of five different risk issues.
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Which Punishment For First-Time Burglars?
The issue of punishment for first-time burglars finds the British public divided as to what would be the best approach, according to new data from the MORI Social Research Institute. The controversy over the issue began when Lord Woolf, the Lord Chief Justice, said the average non-violent, non-professional first time burglar should not be jailed.
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Joining The Euro
Q Which of the following best describes your own view of British participation in the single currency?
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Conditional Support For Fire Strike
As British fire crews are due to begin their first national strike of 2003, a new survey from the MORI Social Research Institute shows they still enjoy public support — although their union and the Government do not.
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Blair Losing Public Support On Iraq
The British are becoming less enthusiastic about the idea of a war with Iraq, according to fresh research from the MORI Social Research Institute.
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Not Without My Mobile!
Almost two in five people (38%) in Britain say they cannot do without their mobile phone, according to research conducted by MORI for Vodafone.
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Workplace Smoking Causes Concern
Half of people in the UK (52%) are concerned they could develop lung cancer as a result of passive smoking in the work place. The MORI Social Research Institute survey, commissioned by Cancer Research UK, shows two thirds of people (68%) overestimate the chances of survival while one in five (20%) have no idea about survival chances. Only 12% correctly estimate that just one in 20 diagnosed with the disease survive for five years.