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Data dive: 2023 in review
In 12 infographics, we look back at key Ipsos Global Advisor polls from a year that was filled with a few very high highs and some really low lows.
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Heading into the biggest election year ever, satisfaction with democracy is low
A new survey by Ipsos KnowledgePanel conducted across seven countries - UK, France, Italy, Sweden, Poland, Croatia and US - reveals support for democratic principles such as voting, building consensus, diffusion of power, despite widespread dissatisfaction with a system perceived to favour the rich and powerful.
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Data Dive: Gen Z women are struggling the most with stress, mental health issues
In five points, we break down how people around the world are dealing (or not) as the pandemic fades away, war grinds on and sticky inflation sticks around.
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Global citizens achieve near consensus: The world is becoming more dangerous
Ipsos survey for Halifax International Security Forum finds 70% of people, on average, across 30 countries expect in the next 25 years we could see another world conflict involving superpowers similar to World Wars I & II
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HISF-Ipsos Threat Index finds natural disasters seen as fastest-growing threat
Ipsos survey for the Halifax International Security Forum finds natural disasters are increasingly believed by global citizens to be a leading threat
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Attack of the drones: six in ten perceive threat from AI-based defense systems
Yet, only 43% of respondents are confident in their government’s ability to respond to such a threat.
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Canada, Germany most likely to be viewed as positive leaders on world stage
Ipsos survey for Halifax International Security Forum finds Iran, Pakistan and Russia are considered the least likely to have a positive impact on world affairs over the next decade
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What Worries the World – October 2023: Worry about immigration control reaches its highest level in over three years
Inflation has now been the top global concern in our What Worries the World survey for the last 19 months.
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21% of parents globally say their children have gone to bed hungry in the last month
A new global Ipsos study conducted on behalf of World Vision International in 16 countries reveals almost four in ten (37%) parents/guardians say their children are not getting the proper nutrients they need on a daily basis, and 21% say their children have gone to bed hungry in the last 30 days. Moreover, almost half (46%) of adults globally say they have worried about finding the money to buy food in the last 30 days, rising to 77% in low-income countries.
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Data Dive: How parents feel about the role of technology in education
In five points, we look at attitudes among adults with kids in school on everything from banning ChatGPT to teaching AI in class.