Trust in adolescence: Cultural, social, and interpersonal context

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Authors

MACEK Petr TYRLÍK Mojmír

Year of publication 2005
Type Article in Proceedings
Conference 9th European Congress of Psychology, Book of Abstracts
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Social Studies

Citation
Field Psychology
Keywords trust; adolescence; cross-national comparison
Description The concept of trust is essential to humanity and therefore, it underlies many contexts and domains of individual and social life. If the basic sense of trust establishes the ground for mutuality during early childhood, then a period of adolescence is important time of anchoring the trust based on knowledge and conscious experiences. Our presentation is based on data from several studies. At first, we inform about cultural differences: how the concept of trust is represented in the mind of adolescents in several European countries (Czech republic, France, Scotland). We explain that the meaning of trust of Czechs seems to be strongly rooted in close interpersonal relationships, in emotional dimension, in feelings of mutuality and in feelings of similarity. This concept of trust is semantically near to the concepts of certainty and equality. It leads to an idea, that trust is more based on feelings of similarity to others. If a Czech sees others to be on the same boat as myself, he/she can trust them. The meaning of trust represents the positive interpersonal relationships and an emphasis on the affinity and equality with other people.
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