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G7 citizens feeling gloomy ahead of summit
Majorities across Canada, Germany, Great Britain, Italy, France, Japan and the U.S. think their countries are in decline, national economies are in bad shape.
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Mid-Year Oncology Review 2025: History Informs the Future
What are the promises and limitations of different therapeutic modalities in solid tumors? As we approach the mid-year point, we reflect on the advancements in oncology in recent years.
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Populism
Is your society broken? Is your country in decline and in need of a strong leader? Ipsos tracks global attitudes to populism.
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Short-Form Social Misfits
The next creative shift that will drive advertising effects in TikTok, Instagram Reels and YouTube Shorts
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Pride
The Ipsos Pride Survey 2025 across 26 countries finds that 69% now support same-sex marriage/legal recognition, with those in Spain (86%) most supportive and people in Türkiye (34%) least in favour.
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Ipsos Pride Survey 2025: Majority are for anti-discrimination protections, but support slips for several LGBT+ issues
A new Ipsos survey across 26 countries finds the proportion in favour of everything from trans athletes to Pride Month marketing is down since 2021.
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Healthcare vs Evolution: Can GLP-1s Rewrite Our Evolutionary Story?
Our evolutionary tale began 6 million years ago, when humans were programmed to hoard calories in a world of scarcity. Today, that ancient wiring has become our greatest health risk.
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Support for populist ideas remains strong, but some countries have seen belief fall
The sixth edition of the Ipsos Populism Report sheds light on the deeper forces feeding the current surge of populism. On average across 31 countries, a profound pessimism is settling in.
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Conflicting Global Perceptions around AI present Mixed Signals for Brands
In an atmosphere of both worry and wonder surrounding the use of AI, trust issues abound. Our 30-country report reveals regional differences in the level of excitement about advances in artificial intelligence, confidence in responsible use, and expectations of future impacts.
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Ipsos Answers Esomar’s Questions to help online research buyers
The primary aim of the ESOMAR's Questions is to increase transparency and raise awareness of the key issues for researchers to consider when deciding whether an online sampling approach is fit for their purpose.