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Half (47%) of Global Employees Agree Their Workplace is Psychologically Safe and Healthy: Three in Ten (27%) Say Not
24 Country Survey of Workplaces finds Employees in United States (64%) and Canada (60%) Agree Most Employees in Argentina (44%), Mexico (43%), Hungary (42%) and Spain (38%) Most Likely to Disagree
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Despite Woes, Conflicts, World a Happier Place than in 2007 as 22% (+2 points) of Global Citizens Say They're `Very Happy'
A new poll conducted by global research company Ipsos for What Makes You Happy Magazine finds that while eight in 10 (77%) citizens in 24 countries generally say they are `happy' in their lives, one quarter (22%) report they are `very happy'--a key measure that identifies comparative depth and intensity of happiness among country citizens and the world. Whereas the general assessment of happiness tends to remain fairly static over time, the measure of those who are `very happy' has the greatest amount of fluctuation.
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Two in Ten (19%) Global Employees `Very Likely' to Take Full-time Job Abroad for 2-3 Years, 10% Pay Raise
Employees in Mexico (34%), Brazil (32%), Russia (31%), Turkey (31%) and India (28%) Most Likely to Relocate Top Incentives: Option to Return in Two Years, 10% Pay Increase, Plane Tickets to Visit Home and Language Training
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High Hopes for 2012: Seven in Ten (72%) Global Citizens Online Think It Will Be a Better Year Than 2011
But Only Four in Ten (41%) Agree Global Economy Will Be Stronger
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Obama at the Electoral Tipping Point
With the 2012 presidential election in sight, the Obama administration faces adversity in a political landscape riddled with economic woes and pessimism. Speculation of Obama's future looks at whether he is still a clear favorite or contender in the upcoming election. Clifford Young and Chris Jackson weigh in on Obama's approval ratings and explore how the political climate is shaping up.
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Sharp World Wide Drop in Support for Nuclear Energy as 26% of New Opponents Say Fukushima Drove Their Decision
In the wake of new nuclear power plant build rebukes in both Germany and Italy, a new poll conducted by international research company Ipsos for Reuters News finds that global support for Nuclear Energy has dropped quickly to 38% (down 16 points from 54%) to now become lower than support for coal (48%)--fuelled by a 26% jump in new opponents to nuclear power (above 50% in India, China, Japan and South Korea) who indicate that the recent crisis in Japan caused their decision. Download the entire Ipsos Global @dvisory now.
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Majority (76%) of Global Citizens Say US Justified in Killing Osama bin Laden
A new poll conducted by global research company Ipsos for Reuters News finds that three quarters (76%) of citizens in 22 countries say the United States was justified in seeking out and killing Osama bin Laden, founder of terrorist group al-Qaida. Download the entire Ipsos Global @dvisory now.
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Julian Assange and WikiLeaks
The report, titled "Ipsos Global @dvisory: Julian Assange and WikiLeaks" is based on 18,829 recent interviews in 24 countries around the world. The report examines citizens' assessment of the WikiLeaks website and its actions. Download the entire Ipsos Global @dvisory now.
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Vacation Preferences
The report, titled "Ipsos Global @dvisory: Vacation Preferences" is based on 18,778 recent interviews in 24 countries around the world. The report examines citizens' primary vacation preferences. Download the entire Ipsos Global @dvisory now.