Affiliation:
1. Hong Kong Institute of Asia-Pacific Studies, Chinese University of Hong Kong,
2. Institute of Sociology at Academia Sinica and Professor of Sociology at the National Taiwan University,
Abstract
Political trust reflects people’s evaluative orientation toward the polity and is thus vital to regime stability. Based on data drawn from a cross-national social survey, this article examines the level of political trust in six Asian societies and the possible effects of a series of institutional and cultural factors on political trust. It finds that institutional factors, particularly the economic and political performance of government, are powerful determinants of political trust, whereas the effects of such cultural factors as post-materialism, traditionalism, and authoritarianism are either insignificant or weak. The superiority of the institutional approach over the cultural approach is reconfirmed.
Subject
Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science
Cited by
127 articles.
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