Ipsos.Digital, a self-service research platform that offers clients fast, simplified access to global research capabilities and insights, today announces that it is available in Japanese.
A new global Ipsos survey of 21,231 adults reveals that, on average across 29 countries, just under a third (31%) of people agree that their government has a clear plan in place for how government, businesses and people are going to work together to tackle climate change. Agreement has fallen since last year by an average of eight percentage points across the 26 countries surveyed both in 2022 and this year.
This is one of the findings of an unprecedented international study on gender equality in science conducted by Ipsos on behalf of the L'Oréal Foundation and involving 5,200 scientists in 117 countries. The study, which interviewed both men and women, explores sexism and sexual harassment in the scientific world and assessed its impact.
This Ipsos analysis for Les Entretiens de New York reveals a small minority in the US and France considers violence a viable means to achieve political goals. Support for democracy remains strong overall – but scepticism towards politicians, the continued spread of fake news and “filter bubbles”, as well as a certain distrust of facts and science, all help to weaken support for the way our democratic systems operate today.