Carving Up Concepts? Differentiating Between Trust And Legitimacy In Public Attitudes Towards Legal Authority
Abstract
In recent years, scholars of criminal justice and criminology have brought legitimacy to the forefront of academic and policy discussion. In the most influential definition, institutional trust is assumed to be an integral element of legitimacy, alongside duty to obey. For an individual to find a criminal justice institution to be legitimate, he or she must (a) believe that officials can be trusted to exercise their institutional power appropriately, and (b) feel a positive duty to obey rules and commands. In this chapter we argue that the nature, measurement, and motivating force of trust and legitimacy are in need of further explication. Considering these two concepts in a context of a type of authority that is both coercive and consent-based in nature, we make three claims: first, that legitimacy is the belief that an institution exhibits properties that justify its power and a duty to obey that is wrapped up in this sense of appropriateness; second, that trust is about positive expectations about valued behavior from institutional officials; and third, that legitimacy and institutional trust overlap conceptually if one assumes that people judge the appropriateness of the police as an institution on whether officers can be trusted to use their power appropriately. Our discussion will, we hope, be of broad theoretical and policy interest.
Publication Date
1-1-2016
Publication Title
Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Trust: Towards Theoretical and Methodological Integration
Number of Pages
49-69
Document Type
Article; Book Chapter
Personal Identifier
scopus
DOI Link
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-22261-5_3
Copyright Status
Unknown
Socpus ID
84957700357 (Scopus)
Source API URL
https://api.elsevier.com/content/abstract/scopus_id/84957700357
STARS Citation
Jackson, Jonathan, "Carving Up Concepts? Differentiating Between Trust And Legitimacy In Public Attitudes Towards Legal Authority" (2016). Scopus Export 2015-2019. 3873.
https://stars.library.ucf.edu/scopus2015/3873