tulamili / App-denomfind

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マニュアルや資料: 使えそうな割合数値を探してくる。 #14

Open tulamili opened 1 year ago

tulamili commented 1 year ago

次の点に留意:

シンガポール

香港

tulamili commented 1 year ago

ヤフーの「みんなの意見」 https://news.yahoo.co.jp/polls

tulamili commented 1 year ago

パブロンゴールド https://brand.taisho.co.jp/pabron/sg/

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tulamili commented 1 year ago

https://prtimes.jp/main/html/rd/p/000000241.000087626.html

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tulamili commented 1 year ago

https://www.todayonline.com/singapore/younger-people-more-likely-see-racism-important-problem-feel-existence-majority-privilege-cna-ips-survey-1858596

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「It re-examined issues related to race and religion that were initially studied in the previous edition of the study published in 2016.

Data was collected from 2,007 Singapore residents from November 2021 to January 2022, and the sample was quite similar to the national resident population in terms of age, gender and citizenship status.

The latest study found that young people in Singapore are more likely to feel that racism is an important problem, with 63.7 per cent of respondents aged 21 to 35 and 63.2 per cent aged 36 to 50 feeling this way.

READ ALSO CNA-IPS survey finds generational divide in views on existence of racial discrimination, dealing with racism But only 46.8 per cent of respondents aged between 51 and 65 and 47.4 per cent for those above 65 years old shared the same sentiments.

In a paper based on the survey findings, IPS researchers said this difference may be due to younger respondents having greater exposure to commentary about race issues on social media, where “woke” and “cancel culture” encourage minorities to call out examples of casual racism, the IPS report said.

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On the other hand, older respondents tend to have lower levels of engagement with online media and some may have personally lived through the years of racial riots before Singapore's independence.

“With this context, the cases of everyday racism and other race-related incidents that are highlighted in news media may seem like less of an important problem as, while hurtful to those involved, they do not necessarily threaten the social fabric at large,” the IPS researchers said.

It also noted a marked increase in the proportion of respondents aged 21 to 35 who feel that racism is an important problem over the past few years — from 49.5 per cent in 2016 to 63.7 per cent now.

However, the figures for those aged between 51 and 65 and those above 65 years old “held steady in the last five years”.」