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In U.S., Concerns About Global Warming Stable at Lower Levels

Americans continue to express less concern about global warming than in the past, with 51% saying they worry a great deal or fair amount about the problem. Less than a majority now believe its effects are already occurring. Americans' attitudes ...

Understanding Shifts in Democratic Party Ideology

Explore trends in the makeup of the Democratic Party, plus what the rising liberal faction and shrinking moderate and conservative factions stand for.

Global Employee Engagement Continues Decline

New data reveal meaningful changes in the employee experience, as global employee engagement declines for a second year, manager engagement drops and job market perceptions shift worldwide.

World's Top-Emitters No More Aware of Climate Change in 2010

Ahead of more rounds of climate change talks, Gallup finds residents in the top five greenhouse gas-emitting countries are no more knowledgeable about global warming than they were a few years ago. Americans who are aware of climate change are ...

Global Acceptance of Gay and Lesbian People

Two decades of trends show that more people today think their communities are good places for gay and lesbian people, but divides remain.

How Gallup Developed Global Survey Questions About AI

To support globally standardized data on AI, Gallup developed and tested survey questions about AI awareness, use and attitudes for the 2026 World Poll.

Global Confidence in Institutions: A 20-Year Review

Global confidence in key national institutions is at its highest point in the past two decades.

Americans' Identification as "Environmentalists" Down to 42%

The percentage of Americans who identify themselves as "environmentalists" has fallen from 78% in 1991 to 42% today, partly because of an emerging partisan gap.

The Coming $100 Trillion

$100 trillion in global growth is coming. Who will get it? Gallup identifies three leading indicators that may help answer that question.

The Partisan Gap in Views of the Coronavirus

Republicans and Democrats differ in their views of many virus-related issues and in their adherence to mitigation mandates.