The 2017 Climate Change Report report provides the findings of the annual climate change research conducted in Australia by Ipsos Social Research Institute.
Ipsos’ latest Perils of Perception survey highlights how wrong the online public across 38 countries are about key global issues and features of the population in their country.
The country is still heading in the wrong direction to 95% of Brazilians, repeating the result of previous months. This confidence decline in Brazil was trigged in January 2015 and stabilized at very high levels since then.
Ipsos in Australia has developed and launched its own Reconciliation Action Plan (RAP). A RAP is a commitment that organisations make – publicly – through the governing body Reconciliation Australia, to make a concerted effort towards reconciliation with Aboriginal & Torres Strait Islander people.
The seemingly harmless Danish 'hygge' trend is now damaging our health, such is the way in which the British have interpreted it. It has been mistranslated as the 'easy life' and is often used as a justification for being a bit lazy.
For many Brazilians, it’s the “Time for Truth”. Years of political scandals, government corruption and the omnipresent “false news” have become too numerous - people now trust only themselves to discover reality. Brands, advertising, companies are not spared by this new age of suspicion.
These are the findings from a 28-country study conducted by Ipsos with the Gates Foundation. This study investigated knowledge of major development progress, expectations of the future and the main issues worrying the world at this moment.
Looking at the history of perception tracking in society, Ipsos has uncovered recent improvements in the overall perceptions of women and the role of women in South Africa.