This thesis consists of three papers that examine sorting and inequality. In the first paper I present a model in which people sort into groups according to income and as a result become biased about the shape of the income distribution. Their biased beliefs in turn a§ect who they choose to interact with, and hence there is a two-way interaction between segregation and misperceptions about society. I show one possible application of this novel framework to the question of income inequality and the demand for redistribution. I demonstrate that under segregation an increase in income inequality can lead to a decline in perceived inequality and therefore to a fall in people's support for redistribution. I motivate my main assumptions with emp...