TY - BOOK AU - Bardhan,Pranab AU - Birney,Mayling AU - Donno,Daniela AU - Ganghof,Steffen AU - Graetz,Michael J. AU - Howard,Christopher AU - Kunicová,Jana AU - Lee,Woojin AU - Mares,Isabela AU - Nattrass,Nicoli AU - Panayides,Daniela Donno AU - Roemer,John AU - Scheve,Kenneth AU - Seekings,Jeremy AU - Shapiro,Ian AU - Stasavage,David AU - Swenson,Peter A. TI - Divide and Deal: The Politics of Distribution in Democracies SN - 9780814708835 AV - HC79.I5 D58 2008 U1 - 339.2 PY - 2008///] CY - New York, NY : PB - New York University Press, KW - Democracy KW - Economic aspects KW - Distribution (Economic theory) KW - Political aspects KW - Distributive justice KW - Income distribution KW - POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political ideologies / Democracy KW - bisacsh KW - Taking KW - broad KW - coalitions KW - contribute KW - distribution KW - distributive KW - encompassing KW - explores KW - individuals KW - inequality KW - institutions KW - often KW - politics KW - risk KW - status KW - surprising KW - this KW - turns KW - twists KW - view KW - volume KW - wealth KW - well-being N1 - Frontmatter --; Contents --; Introduction --; Part I. Institutions --; Chapter 1. Welfare Regimes and Redistribution in the South --; Chapter 2. Distributional Confl icts in Mature Welfare States --; Chapter 3. The Politics of Tax Structure --; Chapter 4. AIDS, Inequality, and Access to Antiretroviral Treatment --; Chapter 5. Distributive Politics and Formal Institutions in New Democracies --; Part II. Individuals --; Chapter 6. Religion and Social Insurance Evidence from the United States, 1970 – 2002 --; Chapter 7. Moral Values and Distributive Politics An Equilibrium Analysis of the 2004 U.S. Election --; Chapter 8. Giving the People What They Want? Age, Class, and Distribution in the United States --; Part III. Coalitions --; Chapter 9. Good Distribution, Bad Delivery, and Ugly Politics --; Chapter 10. Democracy and Distributive Politics in India --; Chapter 11. The Political Uses of Public Opinion Lessons from the Estate Tax Repeal --; About the Contributors --; Index; restricted access N2 - Why are democracies so unequal? Despite the widespread expectation that democracy, via expansion of the franchise, would lead to redistribution in favor of the masses, in reality majorities regularly lose out in democracies. Taking a broad view of inequality as encompassing the distribution of wealth, risk, status, and well-being, this volume explores how institutions, individuals, and coalitions contribute to the often surprising twists and turns of distributive politics.The contributors hail from a range of disciplines and employ an array of methodologies to illuminate the central questions of democratic distributive politics: What explains the variety of welfare state systems, and what are their prospects for survival and change? How do religious beliefs influence people’s demand for redistribution? When does redistributive politics reflect public opinion? How can different and seemingly opposed groups successfully coalesce to push through policy changes that produce new winners and losers?The authors identify a variety of psychological and institutional factors that influence distributive outcomes. Taken together, the chapters highlight a common theme: politics matters. In seeking to understand the often puzzling contours of distribution and redistribution, we cannot ignore the processes of competition, bargaining, building, and destroying the political alliances that serve as bridges between individual preferences, institutions, and policy outcomes UR - https://doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9780814708835.001.0001 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/isbn/9780814708835 UR - https://www.degruyter.com/document/cover/isbn/9780814708835/original ER -