Quantitative research has tended to explain attitudinal divergence towards welfare and redistribution through self-interested rationalities. However, such an approach risks abstracting individuals from the structural determinants of resource allocation and biographical experience. With that in mind, this paper draws on a qualitative study of fifty individuals experiencing relative deprivation and affluence in the UK and New Zealand to examine how lived experiences of inequality affect attitude formation towards welfare and redistribution. Scenario-driven vignettes were used to stimulate an applied discussion of abstract principles pertaining to welfare and inequality. Use of this methodological device proffered novel insight into the phenom...
Economic inequality has a robust negative effect on a range of important societal outcomes, includin...
Across many countries, increases in inequality driven by rising top incomes and wealth have not been...
Income inequality is fundamentally relational in nature, but research on the American public’s respo...
We examine whether individuals' experienced levels of income inequality affect their preferences for...
Economic inequality has a robust negative effect on a range of important societal outcomes, includin...
In this thesis I investigate how an individual’s economic position and the context they live in affe...
This research was partly supported by grant No. PSI2013-45678P, from the Spanish Ministry of Science...
In this essay, I review developments in the ongoing debate about the causal connections between pove...
As economic inequality grows, more people stand to benefit from wealth redistribution. Yet in many c...
This article asks how ordinary people in Germany perceive and legitimize economic disparities in an ...
Previous studies have posited that elites are willing to advance the redistribution of income and so...
This is the final version. Available on open access from SAGE Publications via the DOI in this recor...
Inequality poses one of the biggest challenges of our time. It is not self-correcting in the sense t...
Rising levels of income inequality have been directly linked to rising levels of spatial segregation...
In most contemporary societies, people underestimate the extent of economic inequality, resulting in...
Economic inequality has a robust negative effect on a range of important societal outcomes, includin...
Across many countries, increases in inequality driven by rising top incomes and wealth have not been...
Income inequality is fundamentally relational in nature, but research on the American public’s respo...
We examine whether individuals' experienced levels of income inequality affect their preferences for...
Economic inequality has a robust negative effect on a range of important societal outcomes, includin...
In this thesis I investigate how an individual’s economic position and the context they live in affe...
This research was partly supported by grant No. PSI2013-45678P, from the Spanish Ministry of Science...
In this essay, I review developments in the ongoing debate about the causal connections between pove...
As economic inequality grows, more people stand to benefit from wealth redistribution. Yet in many c...
This article asks how ordinary people in Germany perceive and legitimize economic disparities in an ...
Previous studies have posited that elites are willing to advance the redistribution of income and so...
This is the final version. Available on open access from SAGE Publications via the DOI in this recor...
Inequality poses one of the biggest challenges of our time. It is not self-correcting in the sense t...
Rising levels of income inequality have been directly linked to rising levels of spatial segregation...
In most contemporary societies, people underestimate the extent of economic inequality, resulting in...
Economic inequality has a robust negative effect on a range of important societal outcomes, includin...
Across many countries, increases in inequality driven by rising top incomes and wealth have not been...
Income inequality is fundamentally relational in nature, but research on the American public’s respo...