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Twittertaken from https://yougov.co.uk/topics/entertainment/survey-results/daily/2023/03/21/6595b/3
Survey Question: When you’ve finished reading a physical copy of a book that you own, what are you most likely to do with it?
2979 adults from Great Britain Surveyed.
Data was intended to make a simple pie chart in Excel
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TwitterDetails as covered in the ‘News from the Adjudicator - Edition 2’ quarterly newsletter.
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SOURCE ARTICLE: Majority support a black James Bond, but few want a female or gay 007
DATA SOURCE: YouGov
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TwitterThe GLA undertakes regular polling of Londoners' views. The results from these polls appear on this page, if interested in other years' data click here. January 2025 - GLA/YouGov poll results Link to tables (ODS) January 2025 Ad Hoc - GLA/YouGov poll results Link to tables (ODS) February 2025 - GLA/YouGov poll results Link to tables (ODS) March 2025 - GLA/YouGov poll results Link to tables (ODS) April 2025 - GLA/YouGov poll results Link to tables (ODS) May 2025 - GLA/YouGov poll results Link to tables (ODS) June 2025 - GLA/YouGov poll results Link to tables (ODS)
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TwitterThese are the key findings from the second of three rounds of the DCMS Coronavirus Business Survey. These surveys are being conducted to help DCMS understand how our sectors are responding to the ongoing Coronavirus pandemic. The data collected is not longitudinal as responses are voluntary, meaning that businesses have no obligation to complete multiple rounds of the survey and businesses that did not submit a response to one round are not excluded from response collection in following rounds.
The indicators and analysis presented in this bulletin are based on responses from the voluntary business survey, which captures organisations responses on how their turnover, costs, workforce and resilience have been affected by the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak. The results presented in this release are based on 3,870 completed responses collected between 17 August and 8 September 2020.
This is the first time we have published these results as Official Statistics. An earlier round of the business survey can be found on gov.uk.
We have designated these as Experimental Statistics, which are newly developed or innovative statistics. These are published so that users and stakeholders can be involved in the assessment of their suitability and quality at an early stage.
We expect to publish a third round of the survey before the end of the financial year. To inform that release, we would welcome any user feedback on the presentation of these results to evidence@dcms.gov.uk by the end of November 2020.
The survey was run simultaneously through DCMS stakeholder engagement channels and via a YouGov panel.
The two sets of results have been merged to create one final dataset.
Invitations to submit a response to the survey were circulated to businesses in relevant sectors through DCMS stakeholder engagement channels, prompting 2,579 responses.
YouGov’s business omnibus panel elicited a further 1,288 responses. YouGov’s respondents are part of their panel of over one million adults in the UK. A series of pre-screened information on these panellists allows YouGov to target senior decision-makers of organisations in DCMS sectors.
One purpose of the survey is to highlight the characteristics of organisations in DCMS sectors whose viability is under threat in order to shape further government support. The timeliness of these results is essential, and there are some limitations, arising from the need for this timely information:
This release is published in accordance with the Code of Practice for Statistics, as produced by the UK Statistics Authority. The Authority has the overall objective of promoting and safeguarding the production and publication of official statistics that serve the public good. It monitors and reports on all official statistics, and promotes good practice in this area.
The responsible statistician for this release is Alex Bjorkegren. For further details about the estimates, or to be added to a distribution list for future updates, please email us at evidence@dcms.gov.uk.
The document above contains a list of ministers and officials who have received privileged early access to this release. In line with best practice, the list has been kept to a minimum and those given access for briefing purposes had a maximum of 24 hours.
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The Study of Intergenerational Political Preferences in Great Britain [Intergenpol-GB] is a large survey of British adults’ attitudes toward age gaps in wealth and living standards, as well as the sort of public policies that might help reduce them. Our survey contains questionnaire items relating to perceptions of different age cohorts within society, as well as within one’s own family. It is particularly useful for researchers interested in understanding the amount of support for government investment in services aimed at particular stages of the life cycle (education, pensions, elder care, childcare, housing etc.), as well as the reasons why certain spending proposals are more popular than others. That said, the data will be broadly useful for all manner of social science research projects regarding generational divides, families, attitudes the welfare state and societal conflict more broadly. The survey was designed by Zack Grant, Jane Green, and Geoffrey Evans, of the Nuffield Politics Research Centre, Nuffield College, University of Oxford, in collaboration with Molly Broome, Sophie Hale and Kathleen Henehan of the Resolution Foundation. It was fielded between the 12th and 25th August 2022 by YouGov to sample of 6,021 people selected from the survey company’s large online panel of over 1 million British adults (aged 18+). YouGov provide survey weights (made available here) that can be used to adjust our data to make it politically and demographically representative of the wider British population (e.g. in terms of age, social class, level of education, vote choice and political attentiveness). For more information on YouGov’s methodology please see: https://yougov.co.uk/about/panel-methodology. The survey design and fielding of the Study was made possible by generous funding from the from the British Academy’s Innovation Fellowship scheme (grant number: IF\220068, project title: ‘Are Generations Selfish? How Can Policy-Makers Bridge the Age Divide in British Politics?’). We are very grateful for the Academy’s support. In addition, we would like to thank all of those who provided us with feedback on early drafts of our survey questionnaire. This includes all of those who attended our presentations at the British Academy’s Innovation Fellowship Induction Event in London (June 2022), as well as Katie Breeze, Kathleen Henehan, Bobby Duffy, Rob Ford, Steve Fisher, Petra Schleiter, Patrick White, James Tilley, and Tiphaine Le Corre, in particular. Finally, this dataset is dedicated to the memory of Jim Grant (1958 – 2023), a lifelong champion for improving young people’s access to high quality further education and training.
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TwitterBritain Survey question: "Broadly speaking, which of the following best describe your mood and/or how you have felt in the past week" They are asked to select all that apply. https://yougov.co.uk/topics/science/trackers/britains-mood-measured-weekly
Question answered by britains about their moods.
https://yougov.co.uk/topics/science/trackers/britains-mood-measured-weekly
Photo by Finn on Unsplash
People's mood and feelings.
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TwitterThe GLA undertakes regular polling of Londoners' views. The results from these polls appear on this page, if interested in other years data click here.
January 2021 - GLA/YouGov poll results
February 2021 - GLA/YouGov poll results
March 2021 - GLA/YouGov poll results
April 2021 - GLA/YouGov poll results
May 2021 - GLA/YouGov poll results
June 2021 - GLA/YouGov poll results: wave 1
June 2021 - GLA/YouGov poll results: wave 2
July 2021 - GLA/YouGov poll results
August 2021 - GLA/YouGov poll results
September 2021 - GLA/YouGov poll results
<a href="https
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TwitterYouGov / Mayor of London Survey on women in the fire service and how this compares to the military, police and health service.
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TwitterDatasets for YouGov polling for Major Sports Events in 2024
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TwitterOpen Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
Underlying data from annex B for the report that uses data from the YouGov DebtTrack surveys to update trend information about credit use and the extent of consumer indebtedness in Britain. The analysis suggests a continued decrease in the proportion of households using unsecured credit, but little change in the average amount of unsecured debt among credit users. The data also indicated a decline in the incidence of financial difficulty.
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TwitterThe GLA undertakes regular polling of Londoners' views. The results from these polls appear on this page, if interested in other years data click here.
January 2023 - GLA/YouGov poll results
February 2023 - GLA/YouGov poll results
March 2023 - GLA/YouGov adhoc poll results
March 2023 - GLA/YouGov poll results
April 2023 - GLA/YouGov poll results
May 2023 - GLA/YouGov poll results
June 2023 - GLA/YouGov poll results
July 2023 - GLA/YouGov poll results
August 2023 - GLA/YouGov poll results
September 2023 - GLA/YouGov poll results
October 2023 - GLA/YouGov poll results
November 2023 - GLA/YouGov poll results
December 2023 - GLA/YouGov poll results
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TwitterOpen Government Licence 3.0http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/doc/open-government-licence/version/3/
License information was derived automatically
Underlying data from the publication Credit debt and financial difficulty in Britain 2009-10. A report using data from the YouGov DebtTrack survey [URN 11/963]
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TwitterThe GLA undertakes regular polling of Londoners' views. The results from these polls appear on this page, if interested in other years data click here.
January 2020 - GLA/YouGov poll results
February 2020 - GLA/YouGov poll results
March 2020 - GLA/YouGov poll results
April 2020 - GLA/YouGov poll results
April 2020 – GLA/YouGov London Business COVID-19 impact poll results
May 2020 - GLA/YouGov poll results
June 2020 - GLA/YouGov poll results
July 2020 wave 1 - GLA/YouGov poll results
July 2020 wave 2 - GLA/YouGov poll results
August 2020 wave 1 - GLA/YouGov poll results
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TwitterThis report presents the findings of wave 14 of the ‘Annual Perceptions of A Levels, GCSEs and other Qualifications’ survey. This research project was commissioned by Ofqual and conducted by YouGov.
YouGov surveyed heads of schools, teachers, parents, students, the general public, employers and higher education institutions. The objectives of the research were to investigate:
Ofqual is running a rolling series of online surveys to make sure its statistical releases meet your needs.
We would like to invite you to take part in the online survey for this release.
It will take about ten minutes to complete and your responses will remain entirely confidential in any reports published about the survey.
Fill in the survey: https://www.surveygizmo.com/s3/1805706/ofqual-perceptions-survey">Ofqual’s survey for users of the perceptions statistics
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TwitterThe GLA undertakes regular polling of Londoners' views. The results from these polls appear on this page, if interested in other years data click here.
December 2016 – YouGov/GLA poll results
Link to crosstabs tables (XLS)
December 2016 – Transport
November 2016 – YouGov/GLA poll results
Link to crosstabs tables (XLS)
October 2016 – Public spending and taxation
Link to analysis of results (PDF)
August 2016 – Promoting London Abroad
August 2016 – Pubs and Clubs
July 2016 – Devolution
March 2016 – congestion, night-tube, noise, volunteering and growth
Link to crosstabs tables (XLS)
January 2016 – culture, anti-social behaviour, sport & exercise, digital technology
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TwitterThe survey is the first high income country survey designed to fully operationalise the freedom aspect of the capabilities approach based on Amartya Sen and Martha Nussbaum’s theoretical frameworks to welfare economics and political theory. In particular, the researchers sought to focus on the measurement of adult capabilities across a wide range of life domains delivering to a sample of approximately 1000 adults with the aid of YOUGOV, a UK based opinion polling and market research company specialising in the use of on-line panels.
The survey instrument has been translated into Spanish and is potentially suitable for replication in other countries or with different populations (this is not available at the UK Data Archive). Some of the questions are also potentially suitable for selection and incorporation into studies where understanding opportunities and constraints is important.
Further information about these can be obtained from the project website
http://www.open.ac.uk/ikd/projects_capabilitiesmeasurement.shtml" title="The Capabilities Measurement Project">The Capabilities Measurement Project.
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TwitterThe GLA undertakes regular polling of Londoners' views. The results from these polls appear on this page, if interested in other years' data click here. January 2024 - GLA/YouGov poll results Link to excel tables (XLS) February 2024 - GLA/YouGov poll results Link to excel tables (XLS) March 2024 - GLA/YouGov poll results Link to excel tables (XLS) April 2024 - GLA/YouGov poll results Link to excel tables (XLS) May 2024 - GLA/YouGov poll results Link to excel tables (XLS) June 2024 - GLA/YouGov poll results Link to excel tables (XLS) July 2024 - GLA/YouGov poll results Link to excel tables (XLS) August 2024 - GLA/YouGov poll results Link to excel tables (XLS) September 2024 - GLA/YouGov poll results Link to excel tables (XLS) October 2024 - GLA/YouGov poll results Link to excel tables (XLS) November 2024 - GLA/YouGov poll results Link to excel tables (XLS) December 2024 - GLA/YouGov poll results Link to excel tables (XLS)
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TwitterAbstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.
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TwitterThis report presents the findings of wave 13 of the Annual Perceptions of A Levels, GCSEs and other qualifications survey. This research project was commissioned by Ofqual and the research was managed by YouGov.
YouGov surveyed heads of schools, teachers, parents, students, the general public, employers and higher education institutions. The objectives of the research were to investigate:
Ofqual is running a rolling series of online surveys to make sure its statistical releases meet your needs.
Ofqual would like to invite you to take part in the online survey for this release.
It will take about ten minutes to complete and your responses will remain entirely confidential in any reports published about the survey.
The survey can be found http://ofqual.Perception-Survey.sgizmo.com/s3/">here
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Twittertaken from https://yougov.co.uk/topics/entertainment/survey-results/daily/2023/03/21/6595b/3
Survey Question: When you’ve finished reading a physical copy of a book that you own, what are you most likely to do with it?
2979 adults from Great Britain Surveyed.
Data was intended to make a simple pie chart in Excel