Events
We regularly convene events, speak at conferences and deliver webinars, to share our latest insights and findings. Find out more about opportunities to hear about our research below.
We regularly convene events, speak at conferences and deliver webinars, to share our latest insights and findings. Find out more about opportunities to hear about our research below.
New research from More in Common exploring whether the public feel respected by their politicians, what contributes to feeling respected and what can help restore respect.
Britons’ changing views on the country’s key divides, and which groups feel that our differences are surmountable.
Following weeks of protest in Epping Forest and other parts of the country, our latest research shows growing public opposition to the use of asylum hotels. However, it also finds that more than three quarters of Britons condemn violent protest at migrant accommodation. However, it also finds that the public draws a firm line between protest and intimidation: more than three quarters of Britons condemn violent protest at migrant accommodation. Meanwhile a focus group of residents of the Epping Forest told us that they were concerned about the use the Bell Hotel to house asylum seekers, and angry that the local residents had not been consulted, yet also felt “ashamed” and “petrified” that violent protests had taken over their small town.
A year on from the riots, new research by More in Common in partnership with the UCL Policy Lab and Citizens UK as part of our This Place Matters project on social cohesion, exposes stark divides in social cohesion across the UK.
Introducing This Place Matters Our new public opinion research lays bare the challenges facing social cohesion in Britain today and the urgent need for a renewed focus on strengthening societal bonds, community connection and neighbourhood trust.
Elon Musk’s increasingly forceful interventions into British politics and in particular his personal attacks on Keir Starmer and Jess Phillips on grooming gangs, and support for Tommy Robinson have dominated the news agenda over the past week. Based on polling of 2000 people, More in Common has explored what the public really think about the events of the past week. We have found that:
For almost two weeks, Britain has seen a sustained outbreak of disorder with riots blighting towns and cities in England and Northern Ireland. New research by More in Common explores whether the disorder reflects the unease of millions across the country as some have claimed, or the actions of a handful of thugs as others have suggested.
Drawing on extensive polling and focus groups, this new report by More in Common outlines Britons’ attitudes on crime, policing, and anti-social behaviour: highlighting their lack of trust in the police, and what needs to be done to rebuild public support
How leaders can better navigate cultural change in 2020s Britain.
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