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The Psychology of Trust

From Trust to Trustworthiness

From Trust to Trustworthiness

Trust is an essential component of social life and yet political polarization and social tensions can easily lead to its erosion. The articles collected in this volume throw a new light on the fundamentals of trust and trustworthiness and thus help us understand better the conditions and the limits of trust. The book brings together some of the best recent thinking on trust from across a broad spectrum of approaches and concerns. The essays range from the more abstract discussions of the conditions and nature of trust to its application to our social and political lives in general alongside more subject specific approaches such as trust in the media. Trust is a thick concept with both epistemic and normative content and significance and several chapters engage with the ethical features of trust in distinct ways and also show the central role of trust in our decision-making. There is also an engagement with the phenomenological approach of Husserl in conjunction with Margaret Gilbert’s theory of political obligation. The final chapter by Onora O’Neill one of the pioneers of the discussions of trust and trustworthiness in recent philosophy links the topic of trust to the central issue of the conditions of trustworthiness. Given the paramount significance of the exercise of trust in our daily lives this book will be of interest to philosophers and non-philosophers alike. This book was originally published as a special issue of the International Journal of Philosophical Studies. | From Trust to Trustworthiness

GBP 38.99
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Trust and Organizational Resilience

Privacy Trust and Social Media

The Trust Factor Strategies for School Leaders

The Routledge Handbook of Trust and Philosophy

Testimonial Injustice and Trust

Reading Brandom On A Spirit of Trust

Trust and Conflict Representation Culture and Dialogue

Trust in Risk Management Uncertainty and Scepticism in the Public Mind

Living in an Age of Mistrust An Interdisciplinary Study of Declining Trust and How to Get it Back

Entrepreneurial Ethics and Trust Cultural Foundations and Networks in the Nigerian Plastic Industry

Fear and Primordial Trust From Becoming an Ego to Becoming Whole

Fear and Primordial Trust From Becoming an Ego to Becoming Whole

Fear and Primordial Trust explores fear as an existential phenomenon and how it can be overcome. Illustrated by clinical examples from the author’s practice as a psychotherapist and spiritual caregiver working with the severely ill and dying the book outline theoretical insights into how primordial trust and archaic fear unconsciously shape our personality and behaviour. This book discusses in detail how in our everyday world we lack primordial trust. Nevertheless all of us have internalized it: as experiences of another non-dual world of being unconditionally accepted then sheltered and nurtured. The book outlines how from a spiritual viewpoint we come from the non-dual world and experience a transition by becoming an ego thereby experiencing archaic fear. This book explains fear in terms of two challenges encountered in this transition: firstly leaving the non-world world when everything changes and we feel forlorn. Secondly on awakening in the ego when we feel dependent and overwhelmed by otherness. The book also helps readers to understand trust as the emotional and spiritual foundation of the human soul as well as how fear shapes us and how it can be outgrown. The book makes the case that understanding fear and primordial trust improves care and helps us to better understand dying. It will be of interest to academics scholars and students in the fields of psychiatry counselling psychotherapy and palliative care and to all those interested in understanding fear trust and the healing potential of spiritual experiences. Chapters 1 and 3 of this book are freely available as a downloadable Open Access PDF under a Creative Commons Attribution 4. 0 license available at https://www. taylorfrancis. com/books/mono/10. 4324/9781003176572 | Fear and Primordial Trust From Becoming an Ego to Becoming Whole

GBP 36.99
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Trust Accountability and Capacity in Education System Reform Global Perspectives in Comparative Education

Vaccine Communication in a Pandemic Strengthening Vaccine Literacy Restoring Trust and Engaging Communities to Foster Vaccine Confidence and

Infectious Inequalities Epidemics Trust and Social Vulnerabilities in Cinema

Infectious Inequalities Epidemics Trust and Social Vulnerabilities in Cinema

This book explores societal vulnerabilities highlighted within cinema and develops an interpretive framework for understanding the depiction of societal responses to epidemic disease outbreaks across cinematic history. Drawing on a large database of twentieth- and twenty-first-century films depicting epidemics the study looks into issues including trust distrust and mistrust; different epidemic experiences down the lines of expertise gender and wealth; and the difficulties in visualizing the invisible pathogen on screen. The authors argue that epidemics have long been presented in cinema as forming a point of cohesion for the communities portrayed as individuals and groups “from below” represented as characters in these films find solidarity in battling a common enemy of elite institutions and authority figures. Throughout the book a central question is also posed: “cohesion for whom?” which sheds light on the fortunes of those characters that are excluded from these expressions of collective solidarity. This book is a valuable reference for scholars and students of film studies and visual studies as well as academic and general readers interested in topics of films and history and disease and society. The Open Access version of this book available at http://www. taylorfrancis. com has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives 4. 0 license. | Infectious Inequalities Epidemics Trust and Social Vulnerabilities in Cinema

GBP 38.99
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Political Trust and the Politics of Security Engagement China and the European Union in Africa

Political Trust and the Politics of Security Engagement China and the European Union in Africa

The EU and China are often characterised as parties whose bilateral political differences still remain too large to bridge so that they have failed to convert rhetorical promises into tangible results of cooperation particularly with regards to the field of international security. Yet in terms of their bilateral interaction on security risk management in Africa; EU and Chinese naval officers jointly brought down the number of successful Somali pirate attacks in the Gulf of Aden and to a lesser extent were jointly involved in seeking a resolution to the lingering conflict in Darfur. This book asks how we can make sense as a whole of this relatively sudden shift in regards to the dealings between their respective officials on the topic of security risk management. It argues that the outcomes of Sino-European bilateral dealings on this topic are above all determined by the ability/inability of these officials to build political trust as a complex and cognitive social phenomenon. Consequently the book applies an innovative conceptual framework on political trust to explain why EU and Chinese officials bridged their ‘endemic’ political differences to practically cooperate on Somali piracy but were unable to do so when it came to their interaction on Darfur. To conclude it examines the longer term impact of this bilateral trust-building process by covering more recent examples of bilateral engagement in Libya and Mali and aims to show that although this trust-building process may be case specific ramifications may go beyond the realm of their bilateral dealings on security matters in Africa to impact wider issues of international security. This text will be of key interest to scholars and students of African and Chinese politics EU politics security and maritime studies and more broadly of international relations and to governmental actors. | Political Trust and the Politics of Security Engagement China and the European Union in Africa

GBP 38.99
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Betrayals And Treason Violations Of Trust And Loyalty

Betrayals And Treason Violations Of Trust And Loyalty

Betrayal and Treason examines betrayals as violations of both trust and loyalty. It offers a typology based on membership in or out of collectives within the contexts of secrecy/non-secrecy. The book shows that betrayals include such categories as espionage whistle-blowing infidelity political turncoating conversions collaboration with occupying forces informers mutinies defections strike-breakers professional intellectual and international betrayals human rights violations surveillance assassinations and state sponsored terror. Each one of the categories is presented with enticing stimulating and appropriate real-life illustrations and narratives. The book focuses on treason examines diverse cultures (European countries Israel Canada the United States) and such periods as World War II the conquest of Mexico and looks at such figures as Benedict Arnold Ezra Pound Edward VIII Malinche Vindkun Quisling Lord Haw Haw Tokyo Rose and a host of others. Since World War II is an excellent period through which one can examine issues of treason and since there has been such an increased interest in World War II this book places a particular emphasis on that period and war. Betrayal and Treason is original in its conceptual framework and in its breadth and depth of coverage. Yet judging by the amount of books published on similar topics in the past there can hardly be a doubt that there has always been a genuine demand and hunger for an inclusive and integrative book such as this one. By offering a new and interpretive framework for betrayals this book can serve both scholars and lay people alike in gaining a much better understanding of such a complex and fascinating behavior as betrayal. | Betrayals And Treason Violations Of Trust And Loyalty

GBP 130.00
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Island In Trust Culture Change And Dependence In A Micronesian Economy

The Trust Revolution in Schools How to Create a High Performance and Collaborative Culture

The Trust Revolution in Schools How to Create a High Performance and Collaborative Culture

Teachers are some of the kindest most altruistic and smartest people on the planet yet despite the best of intentions fearful atmospheres can arise organically within schools leaving people feeling disempowered anxious isolated and frustrated. Why is this? What are the impacts? And crucially how do we resolve it? Ofsted accountability funding workload and societal difficulties have led to a response in many schools that is fear based generating staff cultures that affect teacher wellbeing and are leading to large numbers leaving the profession. This impacts not only staff morale and wellbeing but also has a highly detrimental effect on teacher performance and the outcomes for pupils and students. This book examines what underpins these patterns and sets out a practical model for embedding a trust-based culture in all schools. Drawing together four key psychological concepts the book explores what a trust-based culture looks like and the conditions that are needed for this to develop. It looks at the paradoxes that lie in how staff create harmonious and collaborative cultures and the practical steps that are needed to create a culture where staff that crave and give open robust feedback are pro-active learn from failure and have the ability to thrive through challenging questions. Providing a comprehensive blueprint for schools to follow this is essential reading for school leaders and thinkers who want to create a rich healthy environment where collaboration creativity and excellence in teaching and learning can flourish. | The Trust Revolution in Schools How to Create a High Performance and Collaborative Culture

GBP 19.99
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The Human Problem in Schools (1938) A Psychological Study Carried out on Behalf of the Girls' Public Day School Trust

Re-thinking Mediations of Post-truth Politics and Trust Globality Culture Affect

Re-thinking Mediations of Post-truth Politics and Trust Globality Culture Affect

This collection reaches beyond fake news and propaganda misinformation and charismatic liars to explore the lesser-publicized cultural forms and practices that serve as a cultural infrastructure for post-truth society and politics. Situating post-truth in specific contexts as a site of contestation or crisis the book critically explores it as a dynamic and shifting site around which political and cultural practices in specific contexts revolve and overlap. Through a breadth of perspectives the volume considers a number of overlapping cultural and political developments across varying national and transnational contexts: changing technologies and practices of cultural production that sometimes shift and at other times reproduce authority of traditional institutional truth-tellers; seismic cultural changes in representations values and roles regarding gender sexuality race and historical memory about them as well as corresponding reactionary discourses in the culture wars; questions of authenticity honesty and power relations that combine many of the former shifts within an all-encompassing culture of (self-)promotional attentional capitalism. These considerations lead scholars to focus on corresponding shifting cultural dynamics of popular truth-telling and (dis-)trust-making that inform political culture. In this more global view post-truth becomes foremost an influentially anxious public mood about the struggles to secure or undermine publicly accepted facts. This nuanced and insightful collection will interest scholars and students of communication studies media and cultural studies media ethics journalism media literacy sociology anthropology philosophy and politics. | Re-thinking Mediations of Post-truth Politics and Trust Globality Culture Affect

GBP 130.00
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Ethical Artificial Intelligence from Popular to Cognitive Science Trust in the Age of Entanglement

Ethical Artificial Intelligence from Popular to Cognitive Science Trust in the Age of Entanglement

This book offers a unique interdisciplinary perspective on the ethics of 'artificial intelligence' – autonomous intelligent (and connected) systems or AISs applying principles of social cognition to understand the social and ethical issues associated with the creation adoption and implementation of AISs. As humans become entangled in sociotechnical systems defined by human and artificial agents there is a pressing need to understand how trust is created used and abused. Compounding the difficulty in answering these questions stakeholders directly or indirectly affected by these systems differ in their motivations understanding and values. This volume provides a comprehensive resource to help stakeholders understand ethical issues of designing and implementing AISs using an ethical sensemaking approach. Starting with the general technical affordances of AIS Dr. Jordan Richard Schoenherr considers the features of system design relating data integrity selection and interpretation of algorithms and the evolution processes that drive AISs innovation as a sociotechnological system. The poles of technophobia (algorithmic aversion) and technophilia (algorithmic preference) in the public perception of AISs are then described and considered against existing evidence including issues ranging from the displacement and re-education needs of the human workforce the impact of use of technology on interpersonal accord and surveillance and cybersecurity. Ethical frameworks that provide tools for evaluating the values and outcomes of AISs are then reviewed and how they can be aligned with ethical sensemaking processes identified by psychological science is explored. Finally these disparate threads are brought together in a design framework. Also including sections on policies and guideline gaming and social media and Eastern philosophical frameworks this is fascinating reading for students and academics in psychology computer science philosophy and related areas as well as professionals such as policy makers and those working with AI systems. | Ethical Artificial Intelligence from Popular to Cognitive Science Trust in the Age of Entanglement

GBP 39.99
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