Enhancing feelings of security: How institutional trust promotes interpersonal trust

被引:73
|
作者
Spadaro, Giuliana [1 ]
Gangl, Katharina [2 ,3 ]
Van Prooijen, Jan-Willem [1 ,4 ]
Van Lange, Paul A. M. [1 ]
Mosso, Cristina O. [5 ]
机构
[1] Vrije Univ Amsterdam, Dept Expt & Appl Psychol, Amsterdam, Netherlands
[2] Univ Goettingen, Dept Econ & Social Psychol, Gottingen, Germany
[3] Inst Adv Studies IHS, Competence Ctr, Insight Austria, Vienna, Austria
[4] Netherlands Inst Study Crime & Law Enforcement NS, Amsterdam, Netherlands
[5] Univ Turin, Dept Psychol, Turin, Italy
来源
PLOS ONE | 2020年 / 15卷 / 09期
基金
奥地利科学基金会;
关键词
SOCIAL TRUST; HUMAN-VALUES; POLITICAL-INSTITUTIONS; GENERALIZED TRUST; UNITED-STATES; COOPERATION; GOVERNMENT; CORRUPTION; DEMOCRACY; BEHAVIOR;
D O I
10.1371/journal.pone.0237934
中图分类号
O [数理科学和化学]; P [天文学、地球科学]; Q [生物科学]; N [自然科学总论];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Interpersonal trust is an important source of social and economic development. Over decades, researchers debated the question whether and how public institutions influence interpersonal trust, making this relationship a much-discussed issue for scientific debate. However, experimental and behavioral data and insights on this relationship and the underlying psychological processes are rare and often inconsistent. The present set of studies tests a model which proposes that institutional trust indirectly affects trust among unrelated strangers by enhancing individuals' feelings of security. Study 1 (survey on trust in a broad spectrum of state institutions), Study 2 (nationally representative data from 16 countries), and Study 3 (experimental manipulation of institutional trust) provide convergent support for this hypothesis. Also, the results show that the effect remains consistent even after controlling for individual dispositions linked to interpersonal and institutional trust (Study 1 and 3) and country level indicators of institutional performance (Study 2). Taken together, these findings inform and contribute to the debate about the relationship between institutions and interpersonal trust by showing that when institutions are trusted, they increase feelings of security, and therefore promote interpersonal trust among strangers.
引用
收藏
页数:22
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Consumers' Trust in Feelings as Information
    Avnet, Tamar
    Pham, Michel Tuan
    Stephen, Andrew T.
    JOURNAL OF CONSUMER RESEARCH, 2012, 39 (04) : 720 - 735
  • [22] Partisanship and institutional trust in Mongolia
    Jacob, Marc S.
    Schenke, Greta
    DEMOCRATIZATION, 2020, 27 (04) : 605 - 623
  • [23] The effect of social conformity on interpersonal trust
    Shaleva, Anna E.
    REVIEW OF BEHAVIORAL ECONOMICS, 2019, 6 (04): : 353 - 366
  • [24] Interpersonal trust and welfare state support
    Daniele, Gianmarco
    Geys, Benny
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF POLITICAL ECONOMY, 2015, 39 : 1 - 12
  • [25] Income inequality and interpersonal trust in China
    Yang, Zhixu
    Xin, Ziqiang
    ASIAN JOURNAL OF SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY, 2020, 23 (03) : 253 - 263
  • [26] Can Bureaucrats Break Trust? Testing Cultural and Institutional Theories of Trust with Chinese Panel Data
    Fairbrother, Malcolm
    Mewes, Jan
    Wilkes, Rima
    Wu, Cary
    Giordano, Giuseppe Nicola
    SOCIUS, 2022, 8 (02):
  • [27] Interpersonal and political trust: modeling levels of citizens' trust
    Schiffman, Leon
    Thelen, Shawn T.
    Sherman, Elaine
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF MARKETING, 2010, 44 (3-4) : 369 - 381
  • [28] Influence of Interpersonal and Institutional Trust on the Participation Willingness of Farmers in E-Commerce Poverty Alleviation
    Chen, Guoyi
    Tan, Wei
    Zhang, Shangmin
    Yan, Bangquan
    FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY, 2021, 12
  • [29] How Stable is Generalized Trust? Internal Migration and the Stability of Trust Among Canadians
    Wu, Cary
    SOCIAL INDICATORS RESEARCH, 2021, 153 (01) : 129 - 147
  • [30] The tendency to trust as individual predisposition - exploring the associations between interpersonal trust, trust in the media and trust in institutions
    Jackob, Nikolaus
    COMMUNICATIONS-EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION RESEARCH, 2012, 37 (01): : 99 - 120