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All We Need Is Trust: How the COVID-19 Outbreak Reconfigured Trust in Italian Public Institutions

The central focus of this research is the fast and crucial impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on a crucial psychological, relational, and political construct: trust. We investigate how the consequences of the pandemic, in terms of healthcare, state intervention and impositions, and daily life and habit...

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Autores principales: Falcone, Rino, Colì, Elisa, Felletti, Silvia, Sapienza, Alessandro, Castelfranchi, Cristiano, Paglieri, Fabio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7562978/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33132966
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.561747
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author Falcone, Rino
Colì, Elisa
Felletti, Silvia
Sapienza, Alessandro
Castelfranchi, Cristiano
Paglieri, Fabio
author_facet Falcone, Rino
Colì, Elisa
Felletti, Silvia
Sapienza, Alessandro
Castelfranchi, Cristiano
Paglieri, Fabio
author_sort Falcone, Rino
collection PubMed
description The central focus of this research is the fast and crucial impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on a crucial psychological, relational, and political construct: trust. We investigate how the consequences of the pandemic, in terms of healthcare, state intervention and impositions, and daily life and habits, have affected trust in public institutions in Italy, at the time when the contagion was rapidly spreading in the country (early March 2020). In this survey, addressed to 4260 Italian citizens, we analyzed and measured such impact, focusing on various aspects of trust. This attention to multiple dimensions of trust constitutes the key conceptual advantage of this research, since trust is a complex and layered construct, with its own internal dynamics. In particular, the analysis focuses on how citizens attribute trust to Public Authorities, in relation to the management of the health crisis: with regard to the measures and guidelines adopted, the purposes pursued, the motivations that determine them, their capacity for involvement, and their effectiveness for the containment of the virus itself. A pandemic creates a bilateral need for trust, both in Public Authorities (they have to rely on citizens’ compliance and must try to promote and maintain their trust in order to be effective) and in citizens, since they need to feel that somebody can do something, can (has the power to) protect them, to act at the needed collective level. We are interested to explore how this need for trust affects the attributional process, regarding both attitudes and the corresponding decisions and actions. The most striking result of this survey is the very high level of institutional trust expressed by respondents: 75% of them trust Italian public authorities to be able to deal with the COVID-19 emergency. This is in sharp contrast with the relatively low levels of institutional trust characteristic of Italy, both historically and in recent surveys. Moreover, the survey allowed the discrimination of several potential predictors for trust, thus emphasizing factors that, during this crisis, are exhibiting an anomalous impact on trust.
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spelling pubmed-75629782020-10-29 All We Need Is Trust: How the COVID-19 Outbreak Reconfigured Trust in Italian Public Institutions Falcone, Rino Colì, Elisa Felletti, Silvia Sapienza, Alessandro Castelfranchi, Cristiano Paglieri, Fabio Front Psychol Psychology The central focus of this research is the fast and crucial impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on a crucial psychological, relational, and political construct: trust. We investigate how the consequences of the pandemic, in terms of healthcare, state intervention and impositions, and daily life and habits, have affected trust in public institutions in Italy, at the time when the contagion was rapidly spreading in the country (early March 2020). In this survey, addressed to 4260 Italian citizens, we analyzed and measured such impact, focusing on various aspects of trust. This attention to multiple dimensions of trust constitutes the key conceptual advantage of this research, since trust is a complex and layered construct, with its own internal dynamics. In particular, the analysis focuses on how citizens attribute trust to Public Authorities, in relation to the management of the health crisis: with regard to the measures and guidelines adopted, the purposes pursued, the motivations that determine them, their capacity for involvement, and their effectiveness for the containment of the virus itself. A pandemic creates a bilateral need for trust, both in Public Authorities (they have to rely on citizens’ compliance and must try to promote and maintain their trust in order to be effective) and in citizens, since they need to feel that somebody can do something, can (has the power to) protect them, to act at the needed collective level. We are interested to explore how this need for trust affects the attributional process, regarding both attitudes and the corresponding decisions and actions. The most striking result of this survey is the very high level of institutional trust expressed by respondents: 75% of them trust Italian public authorities to be able to deal with the COVID-19 emergency. This is in sharp contrast with the relatively low levels of institutional trust characteristic of Italy, both historically and in recent surveys. Moreover, the survey allowed the discrimination of several potential predictors for trust, thus emphasizing factors that, during this crisis, are exhibiting an anomalous impact on trust. Frontiers Media S.A. 2020-10-02 /pmc/articles/PMC7562978/ /pubmed/33132966 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.561747 Text en Copyright © 2020 Falcone, Colì, Felletti, Sapienza, Castelfranchi and Paglieri. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Psychology
Falcone, Rino
Colì, Elisa
Felletti, Silvia
Sapienza, Alessandro
Castelfranchi, Cristiano
Paglieri, Fabio
All We Need Is Trust: How the COVID-19 Outbreak Reconfigured Trust in Italian Public Institutions
title All We Need Is Trust: How the COVID-19 Outbreak Reconfigured Trust in Italian Public Institutions
title_full All We Need Is Trust: How the COVID-19 Outbreak Reconfigured Trust in Italian Public Institutions
title_fullStr All We Need Is Trust: How the COVID-19 Outbreak Reconfigured Trust in Italian Public Institutions
title_full_unstemmed All We Need Is Trust: How the COVID-19 Outbreak Reconfigured Trust in Italian Public Institutions
title_short All We Need Is Trust: How the COVID-19 Outbreak Reconfigured Trust in Italian Public Institutions
title_sort all we need is trust: how the covid-19 outbreak reconfigured trust in italian public institutions
topic Psychology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7562978/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33132966
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.561747
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