About this item
Highlights
- This book poses a straightforward set of questions: What is happening to trust in our democracies?
- About the Author: Aaron Martin is Associate Professor in Political Science at the University of Melbourne, Australia.
- 208 Pages
- Political Science, Political Ideologies
Description
Book Synopsis
This book poses a straightforward set of questions: What is happening to trust in our democracies? Where is it faltering and where is it stable? And among which groups is this taking place? To answer these, the book assesses the state of trust in established democracies in the twenty-first century.
It looks beyond political trust in government to examine confidence in a wide range of institutions, including courts, universities and the media. This broader view reveals not a uniform collapse but a patchwork of outcomes. In many places, citizens still report moderate or high trust in government, while confidence in other institutions often remains strong.
The findings challenge crisis-driven narratives. While trust has eroded in some nations, especially the United States, in many others it has stayed steady for decades. This book invites readers to move beyond the drama of crisis narratives and towards a richer reality in which trust is not vanishing wholesale, but shifting unevenly across countries and institutions.
About the Author
Aaron Martin is Associate Professor in Political Science at the University of Melbourne, Australia.