62nd Annual Nebraska Symposium on Motivation

Cooperation & Compliance with Authority: The Role of Institutional Trust
Cooperation & Compliance with Authority: The Role of Institutional Trust

The Nebraska Symposium on Motivation and accompanying National Science Foundation Workshop on Institutional Trust are complementary events, both held at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln city campus Union. This year's Symposium and NSF workshop are coordinated by Dr. Brian Bornstein, Department of Psychology, and Dr. Alan Tomkins, Public Policy Center.

The 62nd Annual Nebraska Symposium on Motivation, "Cooperation & Compliance with Authority: The Role of Institutional Trust," will be held April 24-25, 2014. The following prominent trust scholars will be speaking:

James Gibson: “Legitimacy Is for Losers: The Role of Institutional Legitimacy and the Symbols of
Judicial Authority in Inducing Acquiescence to Disagreeable Court Rulings”

Karen Hegtvedt: “Creating Legitimacy: The Interrelated Roles of Justice and Trust”

Jonathan Jackson: “Motivating Cooperation: A Comparative Cross-National Analysis of Procedural
Justice and Legitimacy”

Peter Ping Li: "Trust beyond Trustworthiness: When Trust Matters the Most”

Robert MacCoun: “Public Trust in Social and Behavioral Science Expertise"

David Rottman: “Who Trusts Trial Courts, to What Degree, and Why?”

David Schoorman: “Would Trust by Any Other Name Smell as Sweet? Reflections on the Meanings
and Uses of Trust across Disciplines and Context”

Beth Theiss-Morse: “The Impact of Polarization on Political Trust”

The Nebraska Symposium on Motivation is funded, in part, by Chancellor Perlman and the Department of Psychology. The Symposium and workshop are free and open to the public, educators and students, although preregistration is advised; individuals that cannot attend may watch live streaming of the Symposium here: http://psychology.unl.edu/symposium/nebraska-symposium-motivation.

The National Science Foundation Workshop on Trust will be held April 26-27, 2014. The Workshop will advance trust research by bringing together senior and junior researchers from a variety of scientific disciplines (including criminology, law, management, natural resources, political science, psychology, public administration,and sociology) who are interested in moving toward integrated theories of institutional trust.

Trust in institutions is critical to governing and the functioning of organizations, courts and judicial systems, and so on. Despite so many disciplines studying trust-related issues and influencing trust-related policies, there is relatively little in the development of an integrated framework of institutional trust and confidence. The Symposium and Workshop will incorporate multiple research areas to build trust theory and quality measures of trust. By bringing together insights from diverse researchers, these events will advance knowledge on trust and confidence, contributing to areas of social and natural science and furthering the goal of an integrated understanding of trust. Incorporating multiple research areas has great potential to transform our understanding of this topic.






More details at: http://go.unl.edu/6tav