As income inequality widens, debates around redistribution policies are heating up. New research from the Universities of Zurich, Lille and Copenhagen reveals that support for these policies stems not only from individuals' financial situations but also from an inherent aversion to inequality.
Read Also
- Get $300 off the Bugatti electric scooter with this coupon code
- Hipstamatic’s new app collects everyone’s party photos for you
- International law enforcement shuts down major cybercrime communication platform Ghost
- Mysteries of the bizarre 'pseudogap' in quantum physics finally untangled
- Apple, Google wallets now support California driver’s licenses
- You might get offered promo codes if one of these delivery robots runs into you
- How to fight 'technostress' at work
- The Apple Watch is now a better TV remote
- Researchers document Russian destruction of Ukrainian archaeological sites
- What is digital transformation? Everything you need to know about how technology is changing business
Latest phys
- Mysteries of the bizarre 'pseudogap' in quantum physics finally untangled
- How to fight 'technostress' at work
- Researchers document Russian destruction of Ukrainian archaeological sites
- Why your dog may be waddling instead of walking—veterinarian discusses degenerative myelopathy in dogs
- New model points to increased coastal metal emissions
- Are cows pickier than goats? Answers from innovative large-scale feeding experiments from 275 years ago
- Glasgow's low emission zone is improving air quality: Study
- Older homeowners with spare bedrooms may offer housing crisis fix
- Nanoparticle-based remediation of chromium-contaminated water shows high efficiency
- Research predicts rise in tropical hydraulic failure