Trust and the Coronavirus Pandemic: What are the Consequences of and for Trust? An Early Review of the Literature

Author:

Devine Daniel1ORCID,Gaskell Jennifer2,Jennings Will2,Stoker Gerry2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Politics and International Relations, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

2. Politics and International Relations, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK

Abstract

Trust between governors and the governed is seen as essential to facilitating good governance. This claim has become a prominent contention during the coronavirus pandemic. The crisis also presents a unique test of key hypotheses in the trust literature. Moreover, understanding the dynamics of trust, how it facilitates and hinders policy responses, and also the likely effects of these responses on trust are going to be fundamental questions in policy and trust research in the future. In this article, we review the early literature on the coronavirus pandemic and political and social trust, summarise their findings and highlight key challenges for future research. We show how the studies shed light on trust’s association with implementation of government measures, public compliance with them, mortality rates and the effect of government action on levels of trust. We also urge caution given the varying ways of measuring trust and operationalising the impact of the pandemic, the existence of common issues with quantitative studies and the relatively limited geographical scope of studies to date. We argue that it is going to be important to have a holistic understanding of these dynamics, using mixed-methods research as well as the quantitative studies we review here.

Funder

Economic and Social Research Council

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science

Reference34 articles.

1. Aassve A, Alfani G, Gandolfi F, et al. (2020) Epidemics and Trust: The Case of the Spanish Flu. Working Papers 661. IGIER (Innocenzo Gasparini Institute for Economic Research), March. Milano, MI: Bocconi University.

2. Public health and public trust: Survey evidence from the Ebola Virus Disease epidemic in Liberia

3. Does One Trust Judgement Fit All? Linking Theory and Empirics

4. How Trust Matters: The Changing Political Relevance of Political Trust

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