Many globally are as concerned about climate change as about the spread of infectious diseases
Amid the ongoing COVID-19 outbreak, people around the world are still concerned by the threat of global climate change.
Numbers, Facts and Trends Shaping Your World
Amid the ongoing COVID-19 outbreak, people around the world are still concerned by the threat of global climate change.
Americans give their country comparatively low marks for its handling of the pandemic – and people in other nations tend to agree.
International relations experts’ assessment of the current crises facing the world are often at odds with those of the U.S. general public.
The United Nations is broadly credited with promoting peace and human rights as younger adults are more supportive of cooperation with other countries.
Here are five key findings about people’s attitudes toward systemic reforms in the U.S., France, Germany and the UK.
Assessments of national economies have seen swift downturns in many countries, and few see improvements anytime soon.
The pandemic has had a divisive effect on a sense of national unity in many of the countries surveyed: A median of 46% feel more national unity now than before the coronavirus outbreak, while 48% think divisions have grown.
Here is a look at how people in 14 advanced economies viewed the organization, based on surveys conducted in June through August.
Unfavorable views of China reach new historic high, and a majority supports taking a tougher stand on human rights.
For some governments, the debt incurred on COVID-19 relief will add to the considerable red ink already on their ledgers before the pandemic.
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