Projects per year
Abstract
Purpose
Deservingness theory is gaining popularity in the study of European welfare attitudes but has found little application in the United States. In this article, the author explores what happens if deservingness theory is applied in the study of American perceptions of deservingness and ask which criteria Americans use when deciding the deservingness of needy individuals.
Design/methodology/approach
To capture the variation in American perceptions of deservingness, the author compared qualitative data from two cases. The first case is the liberal northeastern city of Boston, Massachusetts, where 19 interviews were collected, and the second case is the conservative southern city of Knoxville, Tennessee, where 26 interviews were collected. To ensure that any differences in the use of deservingness criteria are due to differences in moral culture, the author chose to interview a similar segment in both cases – the white middle class.
Findings
The author found that interviewees in both cases defined deserving individuals as those whose neediness is due to factors beyond their control and undeserving individuals as those whose neediness is caused by their own poor work ethic. Furthermore, the author found three so-called context-related criteria that do not fit into the existing deservingness framework: a criterion following a cost-benefit logic, the principle of universalism and a principle based on family obligations.
Originality/value
These findings confirm trends in recent deservingness studies indicating that the sensitivity of deservingness theory to the importance of moral culture in the use of both deservingness criteria and context-related criteria must continue to develop.
Deservingness theory is gaining popularity in the study of European welfare attitudes but has found little application in the United States. In this article, the author explores what happens if deservingness theory is applied in the study of American perceptions of deservingness and ask which criteria Americans use when deciding the deservingness of needy individuals.
Design/methodology/approach
To capture the variation in American perceptions of deservingness, the author compared qualitative data from two cases. The first case is the liberal northeastern city of Boston, Massachusetts, where 19 interviews were collected, and the second case is the conservative southern city of Knoxville, Tennessee, where 26 interviews were collected. To ensure that any differences in the use of deservingness criteria are due to differences in moral culture, the author chose to interview a similar segment in both cases – the white middle class.
Findings
The author found that interviewees in both cases defined deserving individuals as those whose neediness is due to factors beyond their control and undeserving individuals as those whose neediness is caused by their own poor work ethic. Furthermore, the author found three so-called context-related criteria that do not fit into the existing deservingness framework: a criterion following a cost-benefit logic, the principle of universalism and a principle based on family obligations.
Originality/value
These findings confirm trends in recent deservingness studies indicating that the sensitivity of deservingness theory to the importance of moral culture in the use of both deservingness criteria and context-related criteria must continue to develop.
Original language | English |
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Journal | International Journal of Sociology and Social Policy |
Volume | 42 |
Issue number | 11-12 |
Pages (from-to) | 1066-1079 |
Number of pages | 14 |
ISSN | 0144-333X |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 23 Sept 2022 |
Keywords
- Deservingness
- Moral culture
- Social benefit
- United States
- Welfare
Projects
- 1 Finished
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Just Worlds
Frederiksen, M., Didia-Hansen, J. & Østerby-Jørgensen, A. M.
AAU strategi talentpleje og tværvidenskab, Independent Research Fund Denmark | Social Sciences, Sino-Danish Center for Education and Research, Carlsbergfondet
01/05/2018 → 31/12/2023
Project: Research
Research output
- 1 PhD thesis
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Liberty and Obligation: The Moral Lifeworlds of White Middle-Class Americans in Northeastern and Southern US
Didia-Hansen, J., 2022, Aalborg Universitetsforlag. 167 p.Research output: PhD thesis
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