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Article

Not So Different After All: A Cross-Discipline View Of Trust

Denise M. RousseauCarnegie Mellon UniversitySim B. SitkinDuke UniversityRonald S. BurtUniversity of ChicagoColin F. CamererCalifornia Institute of Technology
1998en
ABI

Abstract

The article discusses trust theory, multidisciplinary research, and trust between organizations. The analysis of trust is based on four questions: whether scholars can agree on the meaning of trust; if researchers are viewing trust statistically; if the status of trust--cause, effect, or interaction--changes across disciplines; and whether the levels of analysis also change. The “bandwidth” of trust--where trust and distrust are differentiated--can vary over time in the same relationship or coexist at the same time. Bandwidth types are deterrence-based trust, calculus-based trust, relational trust, and institution-based trust. Two conditions of trust are risk and interdependence. Three phases are building, stability, and dissolution. Several studies are mentioned.

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Cited by 20 references