Showing Results for
- Academic Journals (382)
Search Results
- 382
Academic Journals
- 382
-
From:CLCWeb: Comparative Literature and Culture (Vol. 16, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedIn his article "Trust-Based Learning and Its Importance in Intercultural Education" Clemens Seyfried introduces the concept of "trust-based learning," an approach he developed for learning in an intercultural world and...
-
From:Information Systems Research (Vol. 23, Issue 4) Peer-Reviewed
-
From:The Ecumenical Review (Vol. 57, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedWe are in Spain, in the most vicious period of the Inquisition. Frequently, one sees the stakes burning with the "heretics", supposedly the enemies of the true faith. In this hell of flames, Jesus returns to earth and...
-
From:Journal of Sociology (Vol. 37, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedTrust and democracy The relationships between democracy and trust, each independently very popular topics in social science literature, have recently attracted the attention of sociologists and political theorists...
-
From:Administrative Science Quarterly (Vol. 42, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedThe studies reported here evaluated the conditions under which the relationship between employees' trust in and support for organizational authorities will be more or less pronounced. We hypothesized that employees'...
-
From:Trames (Vol. 21, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedDrawing on the population survey of social exclusion in Lithuanian cities, the article examines how residents' distrust of their power to change neighborhoods and influence local authority decisions reflects more...
-
From:Management Dynamics in the Knowledge Economy (Vol. 6, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedThe financial crisis that started in 2008 embodies the failure of a system whose most vulnerable point was detected within the banking sector. The increasing loss of trust in the most important institutions of this...
-
From:Journal of World Business (Vol. 33, Issue 3) Peer-ReviewedMany firms are discovering that formal contracts, while necessary, are not a substitute for informal understandings. Trust plays an important (often dominant) role in successful alliances, and managers often cite...
-
From:Systems Research and Behavioral Science (Vol. 19, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedThis paper offers an outline of, and justification for, what I call a `trusting constructivist' approach to systemic inquiry. I work with the constructivist view that, as Banathy puts it: `what we know about the world...
-
From:PLoS ONE (Vol. 15, Issue 8) Peer-ReviewedBackground Over the last decades, health systems worldwide have faced a decline in public trust. For marginalized minority populations, who generally suffer from poverty and political exclusion, the roots of this trend...
-
From:Nature (Vol. 511, Issue 7508) Peer-ReviewedAn outbreak of Ebola highlights the difficulties of implementing public-health measures. Author Affiliations: The current outbreak of Ebola virus disease in West Africa, which began last December in Guinea and has...
-
From:Diverse Issues in Higher Education (Vol. 24, Issue 24)America, the proverbial melting pot, is boiling over with racial tension. A new poll, "Deep Divisions, Shared Destiny," by New America Media, the nations largest collaboration of ethnic news media, reveals some...
-
From:First Things: A Monthly Journal of Religion and Public Life (Issue 193)Swings in the business cycle are as psychological as they are economic. ,The Economist put the matter in sharp relief: Much in modern economics is taken on trust. Even the most basic goods depend on complex links...
-
From:Social Forces (Vol. 86, Issue 1) Peer-ReviewedUsing a qualitative approach, I study two processes of intraorganizational cooperation and coordination--control and trust--in creative organizations. Specifically, I analyze the complex nature of trust-control...
-
From:Entrepreneurship: Theory and Practice (Vol. 30, Issue 4) Peer-ReviewedEntrepreneurship in established companies centers on new business creation that is essential for profitability and growth. Yet, it is a complex process that is riven with technical, organizational, and political...
-
From:Journal of Managerial Issues (Vol. 16, Issue 1) Peer-Reviewed"Trusting behavior may be motivated primarily by strong positive affect for the object of trust or by 'good rational reasons' why the object of trust merits trust, or, more usually, some combination of both. Trust in...
-
From:Pharmaceutical Technology (Vol. 24, Issue 8) Peer-ReviewedA successful relationship between a contract research organization and its client begins with trust. Establishing trust involves asking pertinent questions, recognizing the importance of good communication, and being...
-
From:Army Lawyer (Issue 6)For more than two centuries, the Army has taken great pride in its people--our most valuable weapon system. In the last few years, as we have focused much of our attention on readiness, have we consequently forgotten how...
-
From:Constitutional Commentary (Vol. 36, Issue 2) Peer-ReviewedSuch is the way David Strauss, at about the time John Hart Ely's Democracy and Distrust turned 25, distilled its essence. And Strauss' is, I think, a very fair distillation. As the first chapter of Ely's landmark book...
-
From:The American Biology Teacher (Vol. 74, Issue 5) Peer-ReviewedConsider the recent controversy over prostate cancer screening. A Presidential Task Force scaled back recommended testing. But many doctors, citing important cases of detecting cancer, disagreed (Harris, 2011; Brownlee...