International audienceThis article investigates the dynamics of support for income redistribution in Europe. With European Social Survey data spanning 2006 to 2012, it assesses whether the Great Recession resulted in substantial parallelism or increasing polarisation in preference change across various sub-publics. After introducing hypotheses based on claims that social groups are affected differently by economic insecurity, the article proceeds in two empirical sections. First, whereas prior research suggests that hard times fuel diverging attitudinal patterns, it is found that income groups, ideological groups and educational groups did not shift differently over time during the first years of the crisis, thus providing strong evidence f...
Political developments since the 2008 financial crisis have sparked renewed interest in the electora...
The ?Great Recession? in Europe started in early 2008 and was the greatest economic crisis facing th...
Welfare policies have long been met with both scorn and support among voters. Yet, studies reveal th...
International audienceThis article investigates the dynamics of support for income redistribution in...
Author's version of an article in the journal: Journal of Social Policy. Also available from the pub...
peer reviewedThis paper analyses the effects of the recent Economic Crisis on individual preferences...
© 2019, © 2019 European Sociological Association. This paper investigates whether economic indicator...
First published online: 21 May 2021This paper investigates changes over the period 2005 to 2014 in m...
The 2008 European recession has been linked to higher political unconventionality across countries i...
The European economic crisis has brought economic hardship and prolonged instability to many countri...
<p>In times of increasing globalisation scholars put considerable efforts into understanding the con...
The economic crisis and the unequal degree to which it has affected EU member states h...
Economic hardship fuels worries about a possible higher share of extremist parties in European legis...
When do attitudes towards inequality change? Scholars have examined why publics change their attitud...
Abstract The growing inequality of market income has attracted considerable attention; less so the r...
Political developments since the 2008 financial crisis have sparked renewed interest in the electora...
The ?Great Recession? in Europe started in early 2008 and was the greatest economic crisis facing th...
Welfare policies have long been met with both scorn and support among voters. Yet, studies reveal th...
International audienceThis article investigates the dynamics of support for income redistribution in...
Author's version of an article in the journal: Journal of Social Policy. Also available from the pub...
peer reviewedThis paper analyses the effects of the recent Economic Crisis on individual preferences...
© 2019, © 2019 European Sociological Association. This paper investigates whether economic indicator...
First published online: 21 May 2021This paper investigates changes over the period 2005 to 2014 in m...
The 2008 European recession has been linked to higher political unconventionality across countries i...
The European economic crisis has brought economic hardship and prolonged instability to many countri...
<p>In times of increasing globalisation scholars put considerable efforts into understanding the con...
The economic crisis and the unequal degree to which it has affected EU member states h...
Economic hardship fuels worries about a possible higher share of extremist parties in European legis...
When do attitudes towards inequality change? Scholars have examined why publics change their attitud...
Abstract The growing inequality of market income has attracted considerable attention; less so the r...
Political developments since the 2008 financial crisis have sparked renewed interest in the electora...
The ?Great Recession? in Europe started in early 2008 and was the greatest economic crisis facing th...
Welfare policies have long been met with both scorn and support among voters. Yet, studies reveal th...