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Parenting Not Prison The Answer To Crime — Topline results
A majority of people in Britain thinks better parenting and more police on the beat would do most to reduce crime, with only 8% suggesting more offenders in prison as the answer.
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Parenting Not Prison The Answer To Crime
A majority of people in Britain thinks better parenting and more police on the beat would do most to reduce crime, with only 8% suggesting more offenders in prison as the answer.
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The Egg Index: 54% Of Britons Now Using Interactive Technologies
Egg/MORI report registers 37.5% increase in online banking in 6 months - now at 5.5 million users
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None Of The Above: Non-Voters And The 2001 Election
The low turnout at the last election was not down to apathy but because non-voters made a positive decision to abstain suggests a new report from the Hansard Society based on MORI focus group research.
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The Long-Suffering British?- MORI Survey Reveals Almost One In Four Have Suffered Chronic Pain
Twenty three per cent of the British population have suffered from chronic pain, a new MORI Social Research Institute survey announces today.
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New Poll Shows More People Support Abortion Very Strongly
New research by MORI's Social Research Institute shows that two-thirds (65%) of people in Great Britain agree that if a woman wants an abortion she should not have to continue with her pregnancy. Around one in six disagree and a similar proportion are neutral or express no opinion on this issue.
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It's Official - Given More Time - All We Want For Christmas Is To Relax
Boots unveils results from an exclusive MORI 'Chill' poll that shows that, given more time, relaxation would the top of people's Christmas lists this year.
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A Home Should Be A Basic Human Right According To 90% Of The British Public
Despite 90 per cent of the British public's belief that having a home should be a basic human right, almost 400,000 people live in temporary accommodation, isolated and often with little hope of finding somewhere to call a home.
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Voters Oppose Expansion Of Faith Schools
Nearly twice as many people oppose the Government's plan to expand faith schooling as support it, a MORI poll conducted exclusively for The TES reveals. More than two in five people are against increasing the number of state-funded religious schools, the survey of nearly 2,000 people found.