NSF Trust Workshop Paper Swap


We invite you to share your work related to trust with other Workshop attendees. The purpose of this optional "paper swap" is to allow people to connect with each others' work, to forge potential collaborations, and to solicit feedback or collaborative ideas for moving forward.  Additionally, this paper swap can serve a "mentoring" function for those who are interested in using it is this way.  Junior scholars can upload works in progress and add "Seeking Mentoring" to the beginning of their titles.  Established scientists interested in mentoring more junior trust scholars can then review these manuscripts and be in touch with the mentees.  

If you'd like to participate in this paper swap in any way, please send your paper(s) to Tess at: tneal2@nebraska.edu and indicate how you'd like to participate (e.g., you want feedback on a work-in-progress, you are junior and want a mentor to check out your idea/paper before you move forward with it, you want to share pre-prints or previously published papers with anyone who might be interested, etc.).  Also indicate how you want the file name to appear on the website - what people will see when they go to look at the papers available.

Gibson, J. L. (2014). Legitimacy is for Losers: The Interconnections of Institutional Legitimacy, Performance Evaluations, and the Symbols of Judicial Authority. (In prep)

Hamm, J. A., PytlikZillig, L. M., Herian, M. N., Bornstein, B. H., Tomkins, A. J., & Hoffman, L. (2013): Deconstructing Public Confidence in State Courts

Hamm, J. A., & Bornstein, B. H. (2014). An organizing framework of trust in institutions (In prep)

Möllering, G. (2013).  Process views of trusting and crises. In R. Bachmann & A. Zaheer (Eds.), Handbook of Advances in Trust Research. 284 – 305. Cheltenham, UK: Edward Elgar.

Möllering, G. (2014). Trust, calculativeness, and relationships: A special issue 20 years after Williamson’s warning. Journal of Trust Research, 4 (1), 1 – 21.

Shockley, E., & Fairdosi, A. S. (2014). Power to the People? Cognitive and Motivational Mechanisms of Disengagement from Direct Democracy (Under review)

Shockley, E., Wynn, A., & Ashburn-Nardo, L. (2014). Dimensions of Black Identity Predict System Justification (Under review)