YouGov-Cambridge research shows the extent to which conspiracy theories have become mainstream
YouGov research shows that Britons are among the least likely to believe many global conspiracy theories
Research by the YouGov-Cambridge Globalism Project, covering more than 25,000 people across 24 countries, reveals the different attitudes towards conspiracy theories in different parts of the world.
One in four think the threat of climate change is exaggerated and one in six believe the moon landings were staged, reveals YouGov study on conspiracy theories
New findings from the Globalism Project show Americans are divided by conspiracy theories while non-Western countries show the highest levels of belief.
9/11 was orchestrated by the US government, the world is run by a secret group of elites and aliens have made contact with Earth
A third of Brits believe vodka can be used as hand sanitiser while a fifth incorrectly think the novel coronavirus originated in a Chinese lab
John Humphrys' weekly column for YouGov
A new, annual study on populism and the public state of globalisation
Three in five smartphone owners say it’s likely that their device is actively listening to them without being prompted
A survey of 25 countries shows that many people believe TV news while political leaders and social media feeds are considered less trustworthy
John Humphrys' weekly column for YouGov
John Humphrys' weekly column for YouGov
Boris Johnson is poised to announce his plans for easing Britain out of Covid lockdown.
The Centre for Social Justice, a think-tank set up by the former Tory leader Iain Duncan Smith back in 2004, has produced a report this week saying we need to ditch BAME.