Analysis and debate about economic and political justice rarely involves research on the views of the common person
1: The International Social Justice Project; I: Justice in Political Perspective; 2: Distributive Justice: Does It Matter What the People Think? 1; 3: Justice, Socialism, and Participation in the Postcommunist States; 4: Justice Beliefs and Support for the Welfare State in Advanced Capitalism; II: Microjustice; 5: Comparative Referential Structures, System Legitimacy, and Justice Sentiments: An International Comparison 1; 6: Justice Evaluation of Income Distribution in East and West 1; 7: Justice Psychophysics in the Real World: Comparing Income Justice and Income Satisfaction in East and West Germany; III: Ideology and Justice; 8: Accounting for the Rich and the Poor: Existential Justice in Comparative Perspective; 9: Egalitarian vs. Inegalitarian Principles of Distributive Justice; 10: Dominant Ideologies and the Variation of Distributive Justice Norms: A Comparison of East and West Germany, and the United States 1; IV: Social Structure and Justice Beliefs; 11: Hierarchical and Social Closure Conceptions of Distributive Social Justice: A Comparison of East and West Germany 1; 12: The Caring But Unjust Women? A Comparative Study of Gender Differences in Perceptions of Social Justice in Four Countries 1