Explores aspects of trust as it relates to risk management and communication. This book is an examination of trust in its forms and complexities. It integrates diverse research traditions and provides insights into the phenomenon of trust.
First Published in 2007. Routledge is an imprint of Taylor & Francis, an informa company.
'An excellent collection of texts that can be recommended both to researchers and to others interested in cooperative risk management... Siegrist, Earle, Gutscher and their contributors have produced a well-written and finely edited book that improves the understandings of the relationships between trust, risk and uncertainty in cooperative risk management.'
Journal of Risk Research
'Given the importance of trust as a factor in risk communication studies, this book offers both communication scholars and their students an excellent conceptual resource.'
Science Communication
'[A]n excellent introduction into the great variety of trust studies'
Journal of Human and Ecological Risk Assessment
'Everyone knows that trust is important in managing environmental and technological risks, yet there is little agreement on the nature of trust and how to study it. Siegrist, Earle and Gutscher convinced leading American and European scholars to write twelve original essays to try to make sense of the origins and consequences of the uncertainty and scepticism common in the public mind. Although the authors use different methods, conceptual frameworks, models and theories, they all write with fervour (perhaps reflecting the importance of the topic), but maintain the highest standards of scholarship. The chapters complement each other so that the value of this book is greater than the sum of the individual chapters. Indispensable to anyone concerned with trust in cooperative risk management.'
Robert E. O'Connor, National Science Foundation
'Trust in Cooperative Risk Management is an excellent collection of texts that can be recommended both to researchers and to others interested in cooperative risk management.'
Anna Olofsson, Dept of Social Sciences, Mid Sweden University, Ostersund, Sweden