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Majority of Japanese Public Does Not Support Whaling or Consume Whale Meat
Wide-held theory that Japanese support whaling and defend whale meat industry is disproved by leading international opinion research firm.
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Saving Money Tops Town People's Millennium Wish List
One in three people (29 per cent) say that saving more money is their resolution for the millennium - while only one per cent of people expect to borrow more money, according to new MORI research by IFA Network.
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Big Business Ideas Are Born In The Bathroom
Top business leaders throughout Britain are more likely to get their best ideas in the bathroom than the boardroom - a MORI Captains of Industry survey of chairmen, chief executives and managing directors has revealed.
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'Workaholic' Britain Puts In A Six Day Working Week Says MORI Technology And Toshiba
Survey provides insight into 'Mobile Britain' as UK moves into a wireless world
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UK Could Be Set To Lead The World By Becoming First Online-Society
Conference to be staged in Britain next year reveals findings of MORI survey on what over 2000 Britons think about the Internet
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Failure To Invest In Innovation Could Be The Death Knell Of Many Organisations
Innovation is becoming the number one strategic issue for CEOs around the world, as recognition grows about the link between innovation and organisational growth and value creation. The most valuable organisations of tomorrow will be idea-rich, have a culture where innovation is embedded as a core capability and value, and will embrace new and unusual ways of fostering innovation, for example through the creative use of venture capital.
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Public Service Broadcasting Must Survive In The Digital Age
Public service broadcasting mustn't be allowed to wither and die as multi-channel consumer choice takes off. That's the message from the latest National Consumer Council report - a message reinforced by new research into consumer attitudes to TV and radio services.
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How The World Sees Britain
The survey conducted by MORI on behalf of the British Council among the successor generation in thirteen countries reveals what foreigners think about all aspects of British society and culture.
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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'. -
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).