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Fair Enough?

Fair Enough?

Fair Enough?

Support for Redistribution in the Age of Inequality
Charlotte Cavaillé, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
September 2023
Available
Hardback
9781009366069

    Fair Enough? proposes and tests a new framework for studying attitudes toward redistributive social policies. These attitudes, the book argues, are shaped by at least two motives. First, people support policies that increase their own expected income. Second, they support policies that move the status quo closer to what is prescribed by shared norms of fairness. In most circumstances, saying the “fair thing” is easier than reasoning according to one's pocketbook. But there are important exceptions: when policies have large and certain pocketbook consequences, people take the self-interested position instead of the 'fair' one. Fair Enough? builds on this simple framework to explain puzzling attitudinal trends in post-industrial democracies including a decline in support for redistribution in Great Britain, the erosion of social solidarity in France, and a declining correlation between income and support for redistribution in the United States.

    • Revisits key debates in the study of redistributive politics
    • Builds on, and extends, contributions from across the social sciences, including economics, sociology and political psychology
    • Draws on both large and small methodological traditions in political science

    Awards

    Winner, 2024 Class and Inequality Best Book Award, American Political Science Association

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    Reviews & endorsements

    ‘Recommended.’ S. Waalkes, CHOICE

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    Product details

    September 2023
    Hardback
    9781009366069
    300 pages
    235 × 158 × 28 mm
    0.6kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • 1. Demand for redistribution in the age of inequality
    • I. Demand for redistribution: A conceptual framework:
    • 2. What is fair
    • 3. Unpacking demand for redistribution
    • 4. As if self-interested? The correlates of fairness beliefs
    • 5. When material self-interest trumps fairness reasoning
    • II. Changes in demand for redistribution:
    • 6. Explaining stability and change
    • 7. Fiscal stress and the erosion of social solidarity
    • 8. Partisan dynamics and mass attitudinal change
    • 9. How proportionality beliefs form
    • 10. The nature and origins of reciprocity beliefs
    • Conclusion
    • Index.
      Author
    • Charlotte Cavaillé , University of Michigan, Ann Arbor

      Charlotte Cavaillé is an assistant professor at the University of Michigan's Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy.