Gonzalo Franetovic
Gonzalo Franetovic
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Consolidation and change: Exploring the impact of anger and network dynamics on inequality belief systems
This study examines inequality belief systems in the U.S. using data from the 2019 ISSP Social Inequality module, showing they form cohesive small-world networks centered on perceptions of inequality and support for redistribution. By applying network models and simulations, it demonstrates that anger strengthens and polarizes these systems, while changes in central attitudes trigger broader shifts across beliefs.
Arturo Bertero
,
Gonzalo Franetovic
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Inequality Belief Systems: What They Look Like, How to Study Them, and Why They Matter
This paper introduces the concept of inequality belief systems as networks of perceptions, explanations, and attitudes. It uses U.S. and Dutch survey data to identify distinct systems that differ structurally and shape support for redistribution.
Arturo Bertero
,
Gonzalo Franetovic
,
Jonathan J. B. Mijs
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Distributive justice and subjective social position: does meritocracy justify income inequality?
This paper examines people’s evaluation of distributive justice in Chile. The objective is to explore how individuals’ subjective social position affects their judgment of their own income and whether this judgment rests on a notion of merit.
Oscar Mac-Clure
,
Emmanuelle Barozet
,
Gonzalo Franetovic
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How do people understand inequality in Chile? A study through attitude network analysis
This article constitutes the first application of the attitude network approach to peoples’ views on inequality. We adopt a network model in which nodes represent survey variables and edges their conditional associations. This allows us to conceptualize perceptions, beliefs, and judgments about inequality as a network of connected evaluative reactions.
Gonzalo Franetovic
,
Arturo Bertero
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Examining the effects of social protest on the environmental impact assessment process in Chile
This article addresses this issue through a quantitative analysis of the projects submitted for EIA in Chile between 2009 and 2019, unpacking how the presence of social protest affects the qualification granted by public services and the time elapsed between when the project is presented and finally receives qualification.
Felipe Irarrazaval
,
Caroline Stamm
,
Aldo Madariaga
,
Antoine Maillet
,
Gonzalo Franetovic
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Preferences for Income Redistribution in Unequal Contexts: Changes in Latin America Between 2008 and 2018
A series of theories focused on self-interest have continuously established a negative link between people’s income and their support for the reduction of inequalities through redistribution. Despite this, the evidence is scarce and sometimes contradictory while its study in Latin America is almost non-existent. Using data from the LAPOP Survey between 2008 and 2018, a longitudinal dimension is considered for the first time in the measurement of Latin American redistributive preferences, using hybrid multilevel regression models.
Gonzalo Franetovic
,
Juan-Carlos Castillo
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Mapping the elite in chilean universities: A quantitative-multidimensional analysis
This article seeks to map the elites in the Chilean university field, identifying the main undergraduates programmes and universities where this group is concentrated and, furthermore, typifying how these institutions promote (or not) processes of mobility and reproduction of the elites.
Cristóbal Villalobos
,
Maria Luísa Quaresma
,
Gonzalo Franetovic
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Individual, social and environmental determinants of overweight and obesity among Chilean adolescents
This article aims to identify individual, social and environmental factors that affect the likelihood of adolescents to become overweight or obese. We used physical condition data of a sample of 900 urban eighth grade students from Santiago, obtained in the 2011 National Study of Physical Education. This information was complemented with georeferenced data from the place of residence of students and the environment in which they live.
Ariel Azar
,
Gonzalo Franetovic
,
Matías Martínez
,
Humberto Santos
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