Various studies have demonstrated that while the lower educated support economic redistribution more than the higher educated do, they nonetheless dislike welfare support for immigrants more strongly. This paper aims to explain this remarkably particularistic application of the principle of economic egalitarianism (`welfare chauvinism¿) by testing three theories by means of survey data representative for the Dutch population (N = 1,972). The first theory asserts that the low level of political competence of the lower educated is responsible, the second focuses on their weak economic position, and the third claims that their limited amount of cultural capital is decisive. Only the latter explanation is confirmed and implications for debates ...
As the asylum crisis hit Europe in tandem with the Great Recession, concerns about declining support...
‘Some are more equal than others’: economic egalitarianism and welfare chauvinism in the Netherlands...
Abstract: Income inequality is not persistent as far as the Netherlands is concerned. Dutch income i...
textabstractVarious studies have demonstrated that while the lower educated support economic redistr...
In studies of mass ideology, it is often found that political values are ordered two-dimensionally a...
Recent immigrants are perceived to be the least deserving of welfare support in Western European cou...
This study sought to explain the relationship between socio-economic status and welfare chauvinism b...
This article contributes to research on welfare chauvinism, i.e. the opinion that access to social s...
This study examines whether or not political representation in the Netherlands is biased toward the ...
textabstractThe Netherlands has a unique tradition in which all major Dutch political parties provid...
This article examines the extent to which four major trends in welfare state reform – privatisation,...
Analyzing the 2008 wave of the European Social Survey, this study assesses whether an elaborate inst...
In recent years, there have been growing concerns about public divisions regarding the exclusion of ...
Since The Netherlands is a multicultural society, knowledge is needed in whether religious factors c...
As the asylum crisis hit Europe in tandem with the Great Recession, concerns about declining support...
As the asylum crisis hit Europe in tandem with the Great Recession, concerns about declining support...
‘Some are more equal than others’: economic egalitarianism and welfare chauvinism in the Netherlands...
Abstract: Income inequality is not persistent as far as the Netherlands is concerned. Dutch income i...
textabstractVarious studies have demonstrated that while the lower educated support economic redistr...
In studies of mass ideology, it is often found that political values are ordered two-dimensionally a...
Recent immigrants are perceived to be the least deserving of welfare support in Western European cou...
This study sought to explain the relationship between socio-economic status and welfare chauvinism b...
This article contributes to research on welfare chauvinism, i.e. the opinion that access to social s...
This study examines whether or not political representation in the Netherlands is biased toward the ...
textabstractThe Netherlands has a unique tradition in which all major Dutch political parties provid...
This article examines the extent to which four major trends in welfare state reform – privatisation,...
Analyzing the 2008 wave of the European Social Survey, this study assesses whether an elaborate inst...
In recent years, there have been growing concerns about public divisions regarding the exclusion of ...
Since The Netherlands is a multicultural society, knowledge is needed in whether religious factors c...
As the asylum crisis hit Europe in tandem with the Great Recession, concerns about declining support...
As the asylum crisis hit Europe in tandem with the Great Recession, concerns about declining support...
‘Some are more equal than others’: economic egalitarianism and welfare chauvinism in the Netherlands...
Abstract: Income inequality is not persistent as far as the Netherlands is concerned. Dutch income i...