Ipsos MORI is one of the leading political, social and business research companies in the UK and Ireland. We produce many reports and thought pieces which review our research and thinking across a broad range of topics.
After Fukushima 10 March 2012 A year on from the Tōhoku earthquake and tsunami which created a succession of failures in the Fukushima I Nuclear Power Plant in Japan, Ipsos MORI has brought together a pamphlet of its latest thinking on public attitudes to energy policy around the globe.
core Summer 09 - Getting the Green Light 15 July 2009
End Of Year Review 2006 December 2006 Ipsos MORI end of year review covering the main political issues of 2006. This was the year when the government struggled on with public service reform, but hit new lows in terms of public confidence in the NHS (despite levels of satisfaction with actual treatments remaining higher than before). It was a year when, for the first time ever, race and immigration became the key issues that Britons saw facing the country. A year when ratings of both the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition fell. A year when, compared to the rest of the G6 countries, Britons were the most negative about their government's handling of crime.
Experiment Earth? 9 September 2010 A public dialogue conducted for the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC) on geoengineering − technologies that involve the deliberate and large scale manipulation of the Earth’s climate system to reduce the extent and impact of climate change.
In Perspective 2008/09 1 January 2009 What does the future hold? This Ipsos MORI report looks back at Britain in 2008 and ahead to Britain in 2009.
Strengthening Local Democracy - Focus Groups February 2010 Ipsos MORI focus groups inform Strengthening Local Democracy Consultation, answering tough questions including "do councils have the powers they need to tackle climate change?"
Tipping Point or Turning Point? Social Marketing & Climate Change 24 July 2007 This latest research by Ipsos MORI is key in helping all concerned to understand and unpick these choices. Where are we now? How did we get here? And what are the possible solutions?