Rechercher
-
What Worries the World – Août 2023
L’inflation est désormais la principale préoccupation mondiale dans notre enquête What Worries the World au cours des 17 derniers mois. Cependant, les inquiétudes concernant la hausse des prix ont diminué pendant trois mois consécutifs, ayant chuté de 3 points de pourcentage par rapport à juin.
-
What Worries the World – Juillet 2023
L'inflation est désormais la principale préoccupation mondiale de notre enquête What Worries the World des 16 derniers mois.
-
What Worries the World – Juin 2023
L'inflation est désormais la principale préoccupation mondiale de notre enquête What Worries the World des 15 derniers mois.
-
Introducing Synthesio’s trend discovery engine: Topic Modeling
Topic Modeling will be available on the Synthesio platform on 20th July. Our AI-powered discovery engine automatically scans, categorizes, and visualizes hundreds of thousands of online conversations using the power of machine learning to help you uncover unknown or hidden phenomenons and make trend analysis much easier!
-
COVID-19 one year on: Global public loses confidence in institutions
Tracking survey data shows who gained and lost with the public over the past year.
-
The impact of race, ethnicity, and national origin on opportunities: Perceptions and personal experience
Survey for the World Economic Forum explores how much access to employment, education, housing, and social services is influenced by ethnicity and national origin across 27 countries
-
What Worries the World – February 2021
Almost two-thirds (64%) of the public across 27 countries say things in their country are heading in the wrong direction. Coronavirus remains the number one concern in our global survey – a place it has occupied for almost a year.
-
Global attitudes : COVID-19 vaccines
COVID-19 vaccination intent has risen in the past few weeks.
New Ipsos-World Economic Forum global survey highlights the increasing demand for COVID-19 vaccines and diverging views on whether vaccination should be mandatory. -
Are you better off than your parents were? That depends on money
The No. 1 thing people feel worse off than their parents about is retirement.
-
Most say the Coronavirus is an on-going threat; only 1 in 5 see virus contained
A poll of 8 countries shows strong support for actions including travel bans and quarantines to control the virus.