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Wealth Paradox, The: Economic Prosperity and the Hardening of Attitudes


Wealth Paradox, The: Economic Prosperity and the Hardening of Attitudes

Paperback by Mols, Frank (University of Queensland); Jetten, Jolanda (University of Queensland)

Wealth Paradox, The: Economic Prosperity and the Hardening of Attitudes

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ISBN:
9781107439139
Publication Date:
9 May 2017
Language:
English
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Pages:
236 pages
Format:
Paperback
For delivery:
Estimated despatch 10 - 11 May 2024
Wealth Paradox, The: Economic Prosperity and the Hardening of Attitudes

Description

The West is currently in the grip of a perfect storm: a lingering economic recession, a global refugee crisis, declining faith in multiculturalism, and the rise of populist anti-immigration parties. These developments seem to confirm the widely held view that hardship and poverty lead to social unrest and, more specifically, scapegoating of minorities. Yet in this provocative new book, Mols and Jetten present compelling evidence to show that prejudice and intergroup hostility can be equally prevalent in times of economic prosperity, and among more affluent sections of the population. Integrating theory and research from social psychology, political science, sociology, and history, the authors systematically investigate why positive factors such as gratification, economic prosperity, and success may also fuel negative attitudes and behaviours. The Wealth Paradox provides a timely and important re-evaluation of the role that economic forces play in shaping prejudice.

Contents

Part I. What We Know (Or Think We Know): 1. Recognising the elephant; 2. Tracing the origins of 'harsh times' assumptions; 3. Empirical evidence for the 'harsh times producing hard attitudes' hypothesis; Part II. Broadening our Horizon: The 'Wealth Paradox': 4. Rethinking the relationship between wealth and tolerance: national, regional and local trends; 5. Development aid, charitable giving and economic prosperity; 6. The relative nature of wealth; Part III. Understanding the 'Wealth Paradox': 7. Towards an explanation of the wealth paradox: introducing social identity theorising; 8. The wealth paradox explained; 9. The missing link: crafty politicians galvanising latent sentiments; Final words.

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