Preface
Part I: Foundations of Trust
1. Trust: An Analytical Framework for Contemporary Policy Problems
2. Thin or Thick? Reflections on Trust from a Catholic Social Thought Perspective
3. Families and Trust-building in Infants and Children
Part II: Trust and Minority Groups
4. A Mimetic Perspective on Trust
5. Trust and Minority Groups: The Challenge of Diversity
6. Cascading Trust Among Ethnic Groups: Lesson from Contemporary Hispanic Migration
Part III: Trust and Institutions
7. How Mistrust within Government Can Create Mistrust Without
8. Trust and Organized Labor in the United States: A Genealogy
9. The Collapse of Trust in the European Union
Part IV: Trust, Diplomacy, and Peace-Building
10.Trust and Catholic Peacebuilding in Ghana
11.Two-Level Trust Games in Japan-South Korea Relations
12. Trust within NATO
Andrew I. Yeo is Associate Professor of Politics, Director of Asian
Studies, and a Fellow at the Institute for Policy Research &
Catholic Studies at The Catholic University of America. He is the
author of Activists, Alliances, and Anti-U.S. Base Protests
(Cambridge 2011), and is completing two book manuscripts: the first
on the evolution of East Asia’s regional architecture, and a second
co-edited book on North Korean human rights and transnational
advocacy. He is the recipient of Catholic University’s Outstanding
Young Faculty Research Award in 2013 and is a term member of the
Council on Foreign Relations. He received his Ph.D. from Cornell
University.
Matthew N. Green is Associate Professor of Politics a Fellow at the
Institute for Policy Research and Catholic Studies at The Catholic
University of America. Dr. Green is author of Underdog Politics:
The Minority Party in the U.S. House of Representatives and The
Speaker of the House: A Study of Leadership, both published by Yale
University Press. He is also a coauthor of Washington 101: An
Introduction to the Nation’s Capital. He served as President of the
National Capital Area Political Science Association in 2015-16. He
has a BA from the University of California, Santa Cruz, a MA and
MPhil from Yale University, and a Ph.D. from Yale University.
'Trust is thought to be the glue that holds society, domestic and international, together. But we have reason to think that trust is declining. This book offers thoughts by a remarkable variety of scholars on the role of trust in different collectivities, institutions and relationships and what to expect if it starts to fade. This is an excellent example of interdisciplinary collaboration on crucial social problems.' - Brian Rathbun, University of Southern California'Covering a broad range of political questions and contexts, this interdisciplinary collection admirably coheres around a concept of trust that is relational and thus variable by time, location, and political context. Demonstrating the challenges that declining trust poses locally, nationally, and internationally, Living in an Age of Mistrust merits attention from students, scholars, and anyone interested in nurturing the bonds of trust to address problems of policymaking, community building, and international cooperation.' - Douglas Harris, Loyola University Maryland
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