Ricerca
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The #MeToo Movement: One Year Later
Men more likely to believe the movement has changed workplace behavior but also more likely to give perpetrators a second chance.
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Women & Water: A Ripple Effect
In 2017-2018, Ipsos and the Water & Development Alliance (WADA) conducted a study to map the hypothesized direct gendered impacts (“women and water”) and the pathways to indirect empowerment impacts (“the ripple effect”) of water programming, and to collect primary data to assess whether these hypotheses can be supported.
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Who Is and Is Not a “Real American”, a “Real Brazilian” or a “Real Chinese”?
Ipsos’s Inclusiveness Index compares countries’ acceptance of social and cultural diversity.
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Womenomics: Italia e Germania unite sull’equità di genere
Presentato uno studio della Camera di Commercio Italo-Germanica in collaborazione con Ipsos che mette a confronto la condizione, le percezioni e le prospettive delle donne in entrambi i paesi.
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Who are the World’s Biggest Wearable Tech Buyers?
From the Fitbit to Apple’s smartwatch: wearable tech is becoming increasingly popular across the globe. Early adopters of new technology, the world’s affluent are at the forefront of purchasing wearable tech, ownership reaching over 30% in Spain, Turkey and the USA.
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International Women’s Day: Global misperceptions of equality and the need to Press for Progress
To mark International Women’s Day, and in the wake of the #metoo campaign, a new global study by Ipsos in collaboration with International Women’s Day across 27 countries highlights the level of concern people around the world have about a number of equality issues.
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Global Attitudes Toward Transgender People
As part of Ipsos’ ongoing commitment to bringing voice to people through data, Ipsos undertook a survey on the topic of transgender people on our monthly global survey vehicle Global Advisor.
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Countries that Have a Younger Population Are More Optimistic About 2018 Than Countries with an Aging Population
The majority of adults are optimist about what the new year will bring, especially those in countries who have a lower median age, according to a recent online survey conducted by Ipsos in 28 different countries.
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What Worries the World?
The everyday concerns of the global population are the focus of one of Ipsos’ flagship global surveys. Each month we ask an online sample of over 18,000 citizens in more than 25 countries1 about the key issues they believe are facing their country, asking them to pick up to three from a diverse array of topics, ranging from unemployment to access to credit.