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Deprivation, class and crisis in Europe: a comparative analysis

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Deprivation, class and crisis in Europe: a comparative analysis. / Grasso, Maria T.; Karampampas, Sotirios; Temple, Luke et al.
In: European Societies, Vol. 21, No. 2, 05.04.2019, p. 190-213.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Grasso, MT, Karampampas, S, Temple, L & Yoxon, B 2019, 'Deprivation, class and crisis in Europe: a comparative analysis', European Societies, vol. 21, no. 2, pp. 190-213. https://doi.org/10.1080/14616696.2019.1584324

APA

Grasso, M. T., Karampampas, S., Temple, L., & Yoxon, B. (2019). Deprivation, class and crisis in Europe: a comparative analysis. European Societies, 21(2), 190-213. https://doi.org/10.1080/14616696.2019.1584324

Vancouver

Grasso MT, Karampampas S, Temple L, Yoxon B. Deprivation, class and crisis in Europe: a comparative analysis. European Societies. 2019 Apr 5;21(2):190-213. Epub 2019 Apr 4. doi: 10.1080/14616696.2019.1584324

Author

Grasso, Maria T. ; Karampampas, Sotirios ; Temple, Luke et al. / Deprivation, class and crisis in Europe : a comparative analysis. In: European Societies. 2019 ; Vol. 21, No. 2. pp. 190-213.

Bibtex

@article{7457dfcf05c4423fa305ff233653483a,
title = "Deprivation, class and crisis in Europe: a comparative analysis",
abstract = "Analysing data from an original cross-national survey conducted in 2015 in nine European democracies covering five different types of welfare regime and asking individuals a variety of questions on their deprivation during the crisis, this paper shows that there are important cross-national and cross-class inequalities in deprivation as reported by individuals in different social classes. Cross-nationally, deprivation patterns reflected the welfare regimes of the nine countries as well as the severity of the economic crisis. Working class individuals in countries that were not so deeply affected by the crisis were generally found to be worse off than middle class individuals in countries that were more deeply affected. Semi/unskilled manual classes were found to be the most deprived and class differentials were diminished but not accounted for in multilevel models including a series of controls linked to risk factors and socio-demographic position. At the macro-level, higher inequality as measured by the Gini coefficient was associated with higher levels of reported deprivation. However, cross-level interaction tests did not provide evidence that being in semi/unskilled manual occupations has a further heightened effect on reported deprivation in contexts of higher inequality or lower social spending.",
author = "Grasso, {Maria T.} and Sotirios Karampampas and Luke Temple and Barbara Yoxon",
year = "2019",
month = apr,
day = "5",
doi = "10.1080/14616696.2019.1584324",
language = "English",
volume = "21",
pages = "190--213",
journal = "European Societies",
issn = "1461-6696",
publisher = "Routledge",
number = "2",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Deprivation, class and crisis in Europe

T2 - a comparative analysis

AU - Grasso, Maria T.

AU - Karampampas, Sotirios

AU - Temple, Luke

AU - Yoxon, Barbara

PY - 2019/4/5

Y1 - 2019/4/5

N2 - Analysing data from an original cross-national survey conducted in 2015 in nine European democracies covering five different types of welfare regime and asking individuals a variety of questions on their deprivation during the crisis, this paper shows that there are important cross-national and cross-class inequalities in deprivation as reported by individuals in different social classes. Cross-nationally, deprivation patterns reflected the welfare regimes of the nine countries as well as the severity of the economic crisis. Working class individuals in countries that were not so deeply affected by the crisis were generally found to be worse off than middle class individuals in countries that were more deeply affected. Semi/unskilled manual classes were found to be the most deprived and class differentials were diminished but not accounted for in multilevel models including a series of controls linked to risk factors and socio-demographic position. At the macro-level, higher inequality as measured by the Gini coefficient was associated with higher levels of reported deprivation. However, cross-level interaction tests did not provide evidence that being in semi/unskilled manual occupations has a further heightened effect on reported deprivation in contexts of higher inequality or lower social spending.

AB - Analysing data from an original cross-national survey conducted in 2015 in nine European democracies covering five different types of welfare regime and asking individuals a variety of questions on their deprivation during the crisis, this paper shows that there are important cross-national and cross-class inequalities in deprivation as reported by individuals in different social classes. Cross-nationally, deprivation patterns reflected the welfare regimes of the nine countries as well as the severity of the economic crisis. Working class individuals in countries that were not so deeply affected by the crisis were generally found to be worse off than middle class individuals in countries that were more deeply affected. Semi/unskilled manual classes were found to be the most deprived and class differentials were diminished but not accounted for in multilevel models including a series of controls linked to risk factors and socio-demographic position. At the macro-level, higher inequality as measured by the Gini coefficient was associated with higher levels of reported deprivation. However, cross-level interaction tests did not provide evidence that being in semi/unskilled manual occupations has a further heightened effect on reported deprivation in contexts of higher inequality or lower social spending.

U2 - 10.1080/14616696.2019.1584324

DO - 10.1080/14616696.2019.1584324

M3 - Journal article

VL - 21

SP - 190

EP - 213

JO - European Societies

JF - European Societies

SN - 1461-6696

IS - 2

ER -