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Europe

Explore ͯÑÕÊÓÆµ's research.

ͯÑÕÊÓÆµ's latest update on global safety shows people worldwide feel safer today than they did a decade ago, but many countries have a long way to go.

More adults worldwide say their community is a good place for minority groups than they did 20 years ago, and these perceptions are linked to people's broader outlook on life.

More than four years after Russia's full-scale invasion, Ukrainians' approval of U.S. leadership continues to decline, while views on the war remain stable.

As the war between Ukraine and Russia drags on, Russians' pessimism about their economy and living standards has reached new highs.

Explore the connection between global peace, wellbeing and health in this report based on 145,000+ interviews across 144 countries and areas.

World Risk Poll data show most adults in high-income countries worry about climate change but underestimate how many others in their country do as well.

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

A new ͯÑÕÊÓÆµ analysis highlights the link between self-reported economic hardship and support for parties at Europe's political extremes.

Worldwide, more people today are satisfied with their freedom to choose what they do with their lives than were satisfied two decades ago.

Germany shows a paradox: relatively strong employee wellbeing alongside persistently low employee engagement. New data reveal what managers are missing.

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

Unlike older U.S. adults, younger Americans have grown more negative about their local job prospects in recent years, a trend not seen in most economies worldwide.

European employees have posted the largest regional gain in job optimism since 2011, but employee engagement remains low, with disengaged employees outnumbering engaged employees.

Of three aspects of workplace wellbeing measured globally, enjoyment in daily work is tied to the largest increases in how workers evaluate their lives.

For the second consecutive year, about one in five Britons say their local economy is getting better.

Since creating the World Poll in 2005, ͯÑÕÊÓÆµ has conducted studies in more than 160 countries that include 99% of the world's adult population. The ͯÑÕÊÓÆµ World Poll tracks the most important issues worldwide, such as food access, employment, leadership performance, and well-being.

Ahead of World Press Freedom Day, ͯÑÕÊÓÆµ trends show the majority of adults globally saying their media have a lot of freedom, even as pressures on these freedoms rise.

ͯÑÕÊÓÆµ's Potential Net Migration Index shows where populations would grow or shrink if everyone who wanted to move permanently to another country did so.

In 2025, fewer people worldwide are imagining their futures elsewhere. The U.S., long the world's most desired destination, is attracting less interest than at any point in nearly two decades.

Business Journal

The country's workforce boasts impressive advantages, including high literacy, education, and labor participation rates. But it would benefit from greater employee engagement.