'Despite decades of intense research, it has proven difficult to establish any clear link between public attitudes and welfare types. This book breaks new ground not only because it succeeds in demonstrating a clear empirical connection but also because it does so with exemplary analytical power. Christian Albrekt Larsen succeeds, like none before him, in uncovering the precise mechanisms that shape citizens' support for policy. And he does it with rigor and elegance. This is a book that must be read.' Gosta Esping-Andersen, Universitat Pompeu Fabra, Spain 'This book contributes substantially to the understanding of the formation of popular attitudes towards poor and unemployed people by showing with great empirical detail how the deservingness beliefs of people, which are behind such attitudes, are driven by institutional aspects of the type of welfare state people live in. The causal mechanisms between macro-level institutions and micro-level attitudes, which thus far have often remained a black box, are explored theoretically and laid out empirically in an exemplary way.' Wim van Oorschot, Aalborg University and Tilburg University, Denmark 'This book looks at the long neglected macro-micro link between welfare state regimes and citizens' welfare attitudes. It makes splendid use of a wide range of survey research on major issues as deservingness, poverty and stigmatisation. Because of the systematic cross-national comparison of welfare attitudes, this book is really a must for those studying the vicissitudes of the three worlds of welfare capitalism.' Wil Arts, Tilburg University and University College, The Netherlands 'This will become a key work for anyone attempting to understand how state structures impact on societal attitude formation.' Sociology