2019
DOI: 10.4185/rlcs-2019-1329en
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Trust in Institutional Actors across 22 Countries. Examining Political, Science, and Media Trust Around the World

Abstract: Social trust has long attracted the interest of researchers across different disciplines. Most of previous studies rely on single-country data and consider only one dimension of social trust at a time (e.g., trust in science, the media or political institutions). This research extends a framework developed by the Global Trust Inventory (GTI) by discussing several dimensions of social trust, while simultaneously analyzing how trust in institutions varies across societies. Drawing on an online panel survey colle… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
1
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
13
0

Year Published

2019
2019
2022
2022

Publication Types

Select...
6
1

Relationship

0
7

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 17 publications
(13 citation statements)
references
References 32 publications
0
13
0
Order By: Relevance
“…This discourse of doubt was a strong undercurrent in our interviews, also facilitated by the way in which contemporary information intermediaries individualise searching, retrieving and encountering information via algorithmic curation and personalization. The crafting of ignorance we argue, also involves the reverse engineering of media and information literacy, which appears to be performatively enlisted in the creation of uncertainty by indiscriminately devising trust as an individual responsibility and truth as a matter of personal choice from the 'marketplace of ideas,' cast in a neoliberal framing (Davies, 2018.) The discourse of doubt necessitates the ideal of the sceptical evaluator and its material-discursive construction is folded into today's individualizing and polarizing information infrastructure.…”
Section: Crafting Ignorance and Media And Information Literacy Reversmentioning
confidence: 97%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…This discourse of doubt was a strong undercurrent in our interviews, also facilitated by the way in which contemporary information intermediaries individualise searching, retrieving and encountering information via algorithmic curation and personalization. The crafting of ignorance we argue, also involves the reverse engineering of media and information literacy, which appears to be performatively enlisted in the creation of uncertainty by indiscriminately devising trust as an individual responsibility and truth as a matter of personal choice from the 'marketplace of ideas,' cast in a neoliberal framing (Davies, 2018.) The discourse of doubt necessitates the ideal of the sceptical evaluator and its material-discursive construction is folded into today's individualizing and polarizing information infrastructure.…”
Section: Crafting Ignorance and Media And Information Literacy Reversmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…The circumstances for the said decline of trust vary between different countries and groups in society, but it is a phenomenon that has been documented for most of the world (de Zúñiga et al, 2019). Evidently, the role of trust in media and information literacy is complex.…”
Section: Dimensions Of Trustmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We employed an online panel where participants were collected by international polling firm Nielsen, employing stratified samples on age, gender, and region, based on census information for each country (for details see Gil de Zúñiga, Ardèvol-Abreu, Diehl, Patiño, & Liu, 2019;Gil de Zúñiga & Liu, 2017). The sample for time 1 was collected during September 2015 in 19 countries and during March 2016 for the follow-up with the same people in time 2.…”
Section: Participantsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Other independent variables include social trust (whether or how much other people can be trusted), political trust (trust in political institutions such as the government), and the overall health of the economy. Also, a more positive economic environment seems to produce a higher level of media trust [ 18 , 19 , 20 , 21 ]. In addition, the structural diversity of a local community has been found to predict how much its residents trust the news media.…”
Section: Theoretical Backgroundmentioning
confidence: 99%