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Ipsos Update – August 2021
Featured topics include obesity, sustainability, populism, youth skills and the Tokyo Olympics. We also take a closer look at the latest research from Russia and Africa.
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What Worries the World – May 2021
Global coronavirus concern is much reduced from this time last year, but it remains top of our worry list and reaches a record high in India.
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Let’s party like it’s 1945: a sharp post-pandemic drop in hedonism
Research by Ipsos for the Nationwide Building Society Consumer Insights Panel.
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Ipsos Update - May 2021
Climate change, vacations and vaccine passports, President Biden’s first 100 days and the latest trends in South Korean society are some of the featured topics in this month’s round-up of research and thinking from Ipsos around the world.
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Working through COVID-19: What behaviours will bounce back and what will stick?
Research from Nationwide Building Society and Ipsos reveals tensions over the future of homeworking as employers and employees navigate its benefits and challenges.
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What Worries the World – March 2021
“What Worries the World?”: One year on, COVID-19 remains the greatest global concern.
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Ipsos Update – March 2021
Our monthly round-up of Ipsos research and thinking reflects on the world one year on from Covid-19, looks forward to the world in 2025 and beyond, and presents new white papers on customer experience, product innovation and research methods.
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What Worries the World – February 2021
Almost two-thirds (64%) of the public across 27 countries say things in their country are heading in the wrong direction. Coronavirus remains the number one concern in our global survey – a place it has occupied for almost a year.
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Ipsos Update – February 2021
Our monthly round-up of the latest research and thinking from Ipsos around the world includes new global surveys on life during the pandemic, a new white paper on quality in market research and special features on US and French society.
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Attitudes to COVID-19 vaccines
The global rollout of COVID-19 vaccines will be the largest, fastest and most challenging vaccination program in history. This could bring many problems. Some we will anticipate; some we won’t. One glaring problem that is quickly emerging is a major mismatch between vaccine supply and demand.