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Politics & Citizenship? Young People Don't Want To Play
Young people are turned off by government, citizenship and community. This is revealed today by authors Madsen Pirie and Sir Robert Worcester who unveil the third in their series of reports covering the attitudes and aspirations of young people. Their previous work, The Millennial Generation and The Next Leaders, revealed an ambitious and self-confident generation. Their new work, entitled The Big Turn-Off, is published today by the free market Adam Smith Institute. Based on MORI polls conducted among young people over a 20 month period, it examines their attitudes to government, citizenship and community.
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Women's Understanding Of Cervical Cancer
These are the findings of a new survey commissioned by Imperial Cancer Research Fund from MORI.**
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Confidence Gap Exposed In Online Initiative
Government plans to ensure that consumers have access to the internet and to deliver all government services electronically1 by 2005 is no guarantee that consumers will actually choose to deal online.
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Kids - The Growing Power Behind Technology
Children are turning technological sales, marketing and advertising on its head. Not only are the children of today more switched on to technology, such as computers, the Internet, video games, mobile phones, pagers, etc. than any other generation before - they are now influencing new technologies, and finding uses for the more outdated modes, such as pagers.
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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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Ipsos Polls Archive - 25 Million Adults Have Little Or No Savings And Are More Likely To Play The Lottery Than Save
25 Million Adults Have Little Or No Savings And Are More Likely To Play The Lottery Than Save
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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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50 Per Cent Of Male Workers Suffer From PMT
Pre-Millennium Tension Widespread in British Businesses According to Latest Research
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Britain's PC Users Would Rather Talk to their Computers than Type
Two thirds of Britain's PC users would swap their keyboard for a microphone according to MORI findings issued today. The research, conducted by MORI on behalf of IBM Speech Systems, found that even skilled touch typists would prefer to talk rather than type.