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Ipsos Update – August 2021
Featured topics include obesity, sustainability, populism, youth skills and the Tokyo Olympics. We also take a closer look at the latest research from Russia and Africa.
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Understanding the International Tourist
Let’s not write off 2021 – there are still good prospects for the summer tourist season.
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From highs to lows: interest in the Tokyo Olympics varies around the globe
Six in ten (62%) say the event marks an important opportunity for the world to come together after the Covid-19 pandemic
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Tension between rich and poor is seen as a key source of division around the world
Just over a third of people on average in 28 countries across the world (a Global Country Average of 35%) think that their country is divided by “culture wars” according to a new Ipsos' Global Advisor poll, carried out in partnership with the Policy Institute at King’s College London. Despite this, however, there is wide variation in this opinion when looking at individual countries, and many don’t have a strong view.
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What Worries the World? - June 2021
Concern about Coronavirus falls to the lowest level seen in our tracker so far.
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The tech sector always bets that product quality will override privacy concerns
Probably the most common criticism levelled at the tech sector is the one about privacy – the sense that the tech sector, or government enabled by the tech sector, are collecting far more data on individuals than they should, and that the data is then being sold or used for unclear purposes. While the tech sector sticks closely to its cherished, and well-proven, ideology that positive user experience nearly always mitigates these concerns in practice, it is also true that the concerns of pro-privacy groups within society, and government, are getting louder and more prominent.
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LGBT+ Pride 2021 Global Survey points to a generation gap around gender identity and sexual attraction
Laws to protect LGBT people from discrimination laws and equal marriage and adoption rights have majority support in most but not all of the 27 countries surveyed
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Global public ranks ending hunger and poverty and ensuring healthy lives as top priorities among U.N. SDGs
Governments more likely than businesses and citizens to be seen as not taking enough responsibility for achieving Sustainable Development Goals
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What do Botswana, Indonesia and Colombia have in common? Actually, more than you think!
Nations’ reputations are largely related to that of their neighbors’; however, nations should never write off the effect that other countries around the globe can have on their image.