If public attitudes towards the welfare state, inequality and immigration are becoming increasingly polarized, as recent political events might suggest, the space for progressive social policies is more constrained. Using data from the British Social Attitudes Survey (BSA) spanning 23years, we analyse trends in these attitudes, examining whether there has been divergence between those who have been more and less exposed to disadvantage through changes in the economy and the welfare state across more than two decades. Taken in this longer term context, and examining characteristics not previously considered in relation to public attitudes such as lone parenthood and disability, we find little evidence of polarization in attitudes to welfare,...
Research on the impact of the macroeconomy on individual-level preferences for redistribution has pr...
This article uses deliberative forums to examine attitudes to UK welfare futures. It makes methodolo...
Does public opinion react to inequality, and if so, how? The social harms caused by increasing inequ...
David Binder examines new research showing the hardening of public attitudes towards welfare recipie...
An important tradition in social policy writing sees the welfare state as an agent of social cohesio...
Over the past four decades, there have been two periods of dramatic change in our attitudes to welfa...
Public polarization about the issue of immigration is a significant source of deepening divisions in...
Rising levels of income inequality have been directly linked to rising levels of spatial segregation...
Why don't we observe more redistributive policies while income inequality is rising? Scholars bring ...
This dissertation comprises three essays on the micro-foundations voters' support for welfare polici...
This CASEbrief summarises 'Social security, selective universalism and patchwork redistribution' by ...
Public attitudes to welfare are key issues in social policy research and practice given their import...
Our understanding of cross-national differences in the relationship between social class location an...
© 2019, Springer Nature B.V. Public attitudes to welfare are key issues in social policy research an...
Research on the impact of the macroeconomy on individual-level preferences for redistribution has pr...
Research on the impact of the macroeconomy on individual-level preferences for redistribution has pr...
This article uses deliberative forums to examine attitudes to UK welfare futures. It makes methodolo...
Does public opinion react to inequality, and if so, how? The social harms caused by increasing inequ...
David Binder examines new research showing the hardening of public attitudes towards welfare recipie...
An important tradition in social policy writing sees the welfare state as an agent of social cohesio...
Over the past four decades, there have been two periods of dramatic change in our attitudes to welfa...
Public polarization about the issue of immigration is a significant source of deepening divisions in...
Rising levels of income inequality have been directly linked to rising levels of spatial segregation...
Why don't we observe more redistributive policies while income inequality is rising? Scholars bring ...
This dissertation comprises three essays on the micro-foundations voters' support for welfare polici...
This CASEbrief summarises 'Social security, selective universalism and patchwork redistribution' by ...
Public attitudes to welfare are key issues in social policy research and practice given their import...
Our understanding of cross-national differences in the relationship between social class location an...
© 2019, Springer Nature B.V. Public attitudes to welfare are key issues in social policy research an...
Research on the impact of the macroeconomy on individual-level preferences for redistribution has pr...
Research on the impact of the macroeconomy on individual-level preferences for redistribution has pr...
This article uses deliberative forums to examine attitudes to UK welfare futures. It makes methodolo...
Does public opinion react to inequality, and if so, how? The social harms caused by increasing inequ...