Motivating cooperation and compliance with authority : the role of institutional trust
著者
書誌事項
Motivating cooperation and compliance with authority : the role of institutional trust
(Nebraska symposium on motivation, v. 62)
Springer, c2015
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
This volume explores the various ways in which trust is thought about and studied in contemporary society. In doing so, it aims to advance both theoretical and methodological perspectives on trust. Trust is an important topic in this series because it raises issues of both motivation and emotion. Specifically, notions of trust and fairness motivate individuals to behave in a manner they deem appropriate when responding to governmental authority. On the emotions-related side, individuals have emotional responses to institutions with authority over their lives, such as the city government or the Supreme Court, depending on whether they perceive the institutions as legitimate. The public's trust and confidence in governmental institutions are frequently claimed as essential to the functioning of democracy), spawning considerable research and commentary. For those in the law and social sciences, the tendency is to focus on the criminal justice system in general and the courts in particular. However, other public institutions also need trust and confidence in order not only to promote democracy but also to assure effective governance, facilitate societal interactions, and optimize organizational productivity. Not surprisingly, therefore, important research and commentary is found in literatures that focus on issues ranging from social sciences to natural resources, from legislatures to executive branch agencies, from brick and mortar businesses to online commerce, from health and medicine to schools, from international development to terrorism, etc. This volume integrates these various approaches to trust from these disciplines, with the goal of fostering a truly interdisciplinary dialogue. By virtue of this interdisciplinary focus, the volume should have broad appeal for researchers and instructors in a variety of disciplines: psychology, sociology, political science, criminal justice, social justice practitioners, economics and other areas.
目次
1. Institutional Trust: An Introduction. Brian H. Bornstein & Alan J. Tomkins
2. Would Trust by Any Other Name Smell as Sweet? Reflections on the Meanings and Uses of Trust across Disciplines and Context. F. David Schoorman, Mallory M. Wood, & Christina Breuer
3. Trust as a Leap of Hope for Transaction Value: A Two-Way Street above and beyond Trust Propensity and Expected Trustworthiness. Peter Ping Li
4. Creating Legitimacy: The Interrelated Roles of Justice and Trust. Karen A. Hegtvedt
5. Legitimacy Is for Losers: The Interconnections of Institutional Legitimacy, Performance Evaluations, and the Symbols of Judicial Authority. James L. Gibson
6. Who Trusts the Trial Courts, How Much, and Why? David B. Rottman
7. On the Dual Motivational Force of Legitimacy. Jonathan Jackson
8. Political Trust in Polarized Times. Elizabeth Theiss-Morse, Dona-Gene Barton, & Michael W. Wagner
9. The Epistemic Contract: Fostering an Appropriate Level of Public Trust in Experts. Robert J. MacCoun
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