Contents
Contributors
Introduction // Margaret Levi and Valerie Braithwaite
Part I: The Basis for Trusting the State and Its Agents
Chapter 1: Trust in Government // Russell Hardin
Chapter 2: Trust, Cooperation, and Human Psychology // Simon Blackburn
Chapter 3: Communal and Exchange Trust Norms: Their Value Base and Relevance to Institutional Trust // Valerie Braithwaite
Part II: What Difference Does a Trustworthy State Make?
Chapter 4: A State of Trust // Margaret Levi
Chapter 5: Trusting Leviathan: British Fiscal Administration from the Napoleonic Wars to the Second World War // Martin Daunton
Chapter 6: Trust, Taxes, and Compliance // John T. Scholz
Chapter 7: The Mobilization of Private Investment as a Problem of Trust in Local Governance Structures // Susan H. Whiting
Part III: How Trust Affects Representative Democracy
Chapter 8: Democratic Trust: A Rational-Choice Theory View // Geoffrey Brennan
Chapter 9: Political Trust and the Roots of Devolution // M. Kent Jennings
Chapter 10: Uncertainty, Appraisal, and Common Interest: The Roots of Constituent Trust // William T. Bianco
Part IV: Trust Responsiveness
Chapter 11: Trust and Democratic Governance // Tom R. Tyler
Chapter 12: Republican Theory and Political Trust // Philip Pettit
Chapter 13: Trusting Disadvantaged Citizens // Mark Peel
Chapter 14: Institutionalizing Distrust, Enculturating Trust // John Braithwaite
Conclusion // Valerie Braithwaite and Margaret Levi
Index