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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).
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Girls Just Wanna Have Phones
Motorola's i-generation youth poll reveals what's hot and what's not in teenage Britain
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Ipsos - New Study Pinpoints What Consumers Want From Corporations
Consumers Worldwide Expect Businesses to Achieve Social as Well as Economic Goals New Study Pinpoints What Consumers Want From Corporations
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Political Attitudes in Great Britain for September 1999
Q1 How would you vote if there were a General Election tomorrow?
(If undecided or refused at Q1)
Q2 Which party are you most inclined to support?
Base: 1,823 -
Portillo Poll
Research study conducted for The Mail on Sunday Newspaper - published 12 September 1999
MORI interviewed a representative sample of 1,002 adults by telephone aged 18+ across Great Britain on 9-11 September 1999.Data are weighted to the profile of Great Britain. -
EMU tracker, September 1999
Our latest MORI poll suggests that public opposition to EMU entry has fallen a bit from the June/July peaks, but remains above levels seen early this year or in 1998. Thus far, the government's 'softly-softly' approach to EMU - seeking to sway public opinion without giving too strong a lead - has not had much effect.
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Public Support For Controversial Technologies Could Increase If Applications Are Explained
A new public opinion survey has shown that support for controversial technologies in the Life Sciences may be increased if the public is given proof that those developments are necessary in order to achieve certain benefits. A poll conducted by MORI and commissioned by Novartis UK Ltd shows that if the public can see concrete benefits arising from research it is more willing to support new technologies.
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Explaining Labour's Landslide
Explaining Labour's Landslide
Sir Robert Worcester & Roger Mortimore
Published 20 July 1999
£19.95 / $35 (inc p&p)
by Politico's
www.politicos.co.uk -
EMU: Sceptics Still Ahead
Our latest MORI poll suggests that the trend
in public opinion continues to move against EMU entry. The balance of opinion
against EMU (that is, those opposed less those in favour) in July is similar
to the peak at the time of the mid-June EU election, and well above the levels
seen in 1997-98.