Social Trust and Its Determinants: Institutional Theory or Social Capital

AbstractObjective: This study aims at investigating social trust and its determinants in Sabzevar city. Thedependent variable social trust has been measured through two dimensions: thick trust and thin trust.However our emphasis is on the second one. Hypotheses have been extracted from two theories:...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Format: Article
Language:fas
Published: University of Isfahan 2009-07-01
Series:جامعه شناسی کاربردی
Subjects:
Online Access:http://uijs.ui.ac.ir/jas/browse.php?a_code=A-10-1-46&slc_lang=en&sid=1
Description
Summary:AbstractObjective: This study aims at investigating social trust and its determinants in Sabzevar city. Thedependent variable social trust has been measured through two dimensions: thick trust and thin trust.However our emphasis is on the second one. Hypotheses have been extracted from two theories: socialcapital theory of Putnam and institutional theory of Rothstein and Stolle.Method: Through survey method and questionnaire technique, a sample of 600 individuals at the age of18-65 was interviewed.Findings: Results indicates that there is a significant relationship between independent variablesincluding discrimination experience, corruption, feeling social security, institutional trust(these fourvariables are based on institutional theory) as well as age, and thin trust. These relationships are negative forthe first two variables and positive for the rest. However there is not a significant relationship betweenvariables such as participation in formal groups, using media, participation in informal groups, education,income, and job rank. In multivariate analysis using stepwise regression method, four variables entered inthe model orderly: institutional trust, corruption, social security and age. The four variables explain 53percent of the variance of dependent variable- thin trust.Result: All together we found out the Rothstein and Stolle's institutional theory is more suitableto explain social trust than Putnam's social capital theory.
ISSN:2008-5745
2322-343X