Leslie McCall is Professor of Sociology and Political Science, as well as Faculty Fellow at the Institute for Policy Research, at Northwestern University. She is the author of Complex Inequality: Gender, Class, and Race in the New Economy (2001). Her work on economic inequality has been published in the American Sociological Review, Demography, Signs, the Annual Review of Sociology, Perspectives on Politics, Economic Geography and the Socio-Economic Review, as well as in several edited volumes.
'In this carefully constructed study, McCall leverages public opinion survey data to challenge the traditional narrative concerning American attitudes about economic inequality ... Summing up: recommended.' S. E. Horn, Choice The Undeserving Rich is a powerful and nuanced account of Americans' economic beliefs. Filled with new insights and provocative arguments, Leslie McCall shows that the conventional wisdom that Americans are unaware of or indifferent to inequality is wrong. Based on careful analyses of survey data and media content covering three decades, The Undeserving Rich traces the emergence of economic inequality as a social issue and subtly explores what Americans do and don't want their government to do in response. This timely and important book is required reading for anyone who cares about the politics of inequality in America. Martin Gilens, Princeton University There are rivers of analyses of Americans' attitudes toward the poor, and at least rivulets of analyses of Americans' attitudes toward the rich. But we have surprisingly little research on the crucial questions of how Americans understand the links between rich and poor and how they evaluate the fact of economic inequality. Leslie McCall bravely takes on those questions, and The Undeserving Rich yields fascinating insights. Americans seek more equality, but only if it is channeled through the appropriate use of equal opportunity; it is a curiously expansive and yet restrictive set of attitudes that McCall expertly parses. Jennifer Hochschild, Harvard University Everyone concerned with growing inequality in the United States should read this book as it challenges the myth that Americans have stable attitudes toward inequality or are indifferent to it. McCall looks at attitudes toward the undeserving rich to illuminate how Americans react to income inequality and how they understand the role of hard work and public redistribution in shaping inequality. We learn that for many Americans, income inequality functions as a signal of unequal opportunity and is tied to a concern about the lack of expanding opportunities for the population as a whole. Thus, this important book brings about crucial correctives to arguments often made by political economists about the primacy of economic growth over income inequality. Michele Lamont, coeditor of Social Resilience in the Neoliberal Era In this carefully constructed study, McCall leverages public opinion survey data to challenge the traditional narrative concerning American attitudes about economic inequality ... Summing up: recommended. S. E. Horn, Choice