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The Pew Global Attitudes Project recently released the results of a survey suggesting that the career-oriented woman is globally accepted nowadays.
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In June, the Pew Global Attitudes survey determined that the United States and Americans only have respectively an 8 and 11 percent favorable rating in Turkey.
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In a Pew Global Attitudes survey conducted in March and April of this year, 70% of Chinese said they were better off financially than five years ago.
BBC: China inequality causes unease - Pew survey
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Diplomats from countries where high proportions of people hated the U.S. (according to a recent Pew Global Attitudes Project) were more likely to rack up unpaid parking tickets.
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Last year a Pew Global Attitudes Survey found that anti-Jewish sentiment in Turkey had risen: 76% said they had negative views towards Jews, whereas only 7% said they looked kindly on them.
ECONOMIST: Israel and Turkey
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According to the latest Pew Global Attitudes Survey, based on questioning in April, the proportion of respondents who think China has already replaced America as the world's leading superpower, or will do so one day, was 63% in China, 65% in Britain and 46% even in America (up from 33% as recently as 2009).
ECONOMIST: Disarray in the West generates mixed reactions in Asia
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The recent Pew poll of global attitudes found no country with a higher share of the population opposed to Iran acquiring nuclear weapons than Germany.
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The survey by the Pew Research Center's Global Attitudes Project found that text messaging is now a widespread global phenomenon: In the countries polled, 75% of cell phone owners say they text.
CNN: Social networking booming in Egypt, Russia, survey finds
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Indeed, recent polling by the Pew Research Center's Global Attitudes Project shows that confidence in bin Laden was slumping in the Islamic world, ranging from 22% in Egypt to 1% among Lebanese Muslims.
WSJ: In bin Laden Wake, U.S. Faces Bigger Challenges
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The Pew Research Centre's survey of global attitudes last year discovered that most French and Dutch, as well as pluralities of Britons and Germans, think America is too religious.
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