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Ipsos Update - April 2020
This month’s research digest from Ipsos around the world looks at headlines of the coronavirus crisis, while exploring a range of different topics, including gender equality at work, digital health and the sustainability agenda.
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Signals #2: Understanding the Coronavirus Crisis
The second edition of our digest brings together Ipsos’ latest research on coronavirus and draws on our surveys, social media monitoring and analysis from our teams around the world.
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Close to three in ten men say sexual jokes or stories at work are acceptable
Nearly three in ten men (28%) around the world think it’s acceptable to tell jokes or stories of a sexual nature at work, according to a new global survey to mark International Women’s Day on 8 March 2020
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Global Trends 2020: Understanding Complexity
Global Trends 2020: Understanding Complexity provides a single-source dataset of over 200 questions Ipsos asked of people in 33 markets, on global opinions, attitudes and behaviours around brands, technology, society, consumerism and much more, and combines it with expert analysis by trend specialists.
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What Worries the World?
79% of online South Africans believe the nation is on the wrong track, however, this feeling of unease with the direction a country is taking is rather widespread
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Cyril Ramaphosa popular amongst South Africans, but political parties questionable
A majority of six in every ten (62%) South Africans think President Cyril Ramaphosa is doing his job well.
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Ipsos Update - January 2020
This month’s edition of Ipsos Update features the latest research and thinking from Ipsos around the world on creativity and innovation, NATO, Gen Z in MENA and in-depth reports from Australia, Brazil, Russia and the UK.
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Global attitudes toward gender in 2020
Peru, Spain and Brazil scored as the least gendered countries. Russia was the most gendered, followed by Serbia and China.
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South Africans unsure of what to expect in 2020
To many South Africans, it would seem as if 2020 is likely to bring “more of the same” - drought, economic woes and a low growth rate, political uncertainty and squabbling within and between political parties, load shedding and concerns about unemployment. So, it is no surprise that South Africans view the year ahead with trepidation. However, not everyone feels the same and although working and non-working people are almost unanimous in their views, younger South Africans are more optimistic than older people, and political party allegiance does make a difference to views on the future.
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South Africans weigh in on attitudes towards Women
With the focus on Women during August, the demonstrations in Cape Town at the same time as the WEF conference on Africa and the attention in the media the last few weeks on incidents of gender-based violence, Ipsos examines the diverse opinions that South Africans have towards issues of women’s place in marital relations as well as violence towards women