Participation in voluntary associations is often believed to make citizens more trusting of others. This paper reports longitudinal analyses of a time intensive form of participation-volunteering-and generalized social trust using data from three waves of the Giving in the Netherlands Panel Study spanning 4 years (2002-2006; n = 692) refuting this belief. Trust is relatively stable over a 4 year period (0. 73). Changes in volunteering are not related to changes in trust. Trust is higher among volunteers mainly because of selective attrition: persons with low trust are more likely to quit volunteering. © 2011 The Author(s)
According to a popular version of social capital theory, civic engagement should produce generalized...
Over fifty percent of all people are a member of at least one association and about one-third say to...
Since the mid 1990s, following the reception in Australia of Robert Putnam’s theory about social cap...
Confidence in charitable organizations (charitable confidence) would seem to be an important prerequ...
Sustained volunteering represents an aim difficult to achieve in the context of non-profit organizat...
The article examines the category of trust as a key characteristic of a developed human society. Vol...
There is limited understanding of how attitudinal variables such as generalized trust influence form...
The phenomenon of volunteering reveals itself through the time a person spends for volunteering, thr...
In this research the effects of social trust, the trust in unknown others, and institutional trust, ...
In this research the effects of social trust, the trust in unknown others, and institutional trust, ...
Researchers have examined whether societal developments such as educational expansion, secularizatio...
The relation of giving money to charitable causes and volunteering for an association is examined in...
Item does not contain fulltextThis study reflects upon differences in generalized trust levels among...
This study examines whether volunteering for not-for-profit Organizations (NPOs) which are involved ...
Origins and consequences of charitable confidence are investigated with the Giving in the Netherland...
According to a popular version of social capital theory, civic engagement should produce generalized...
Over fifty percent of all people are a member of at least one association and about one-third say to...
Since the mid 1990s, following the reception in Australia of Robert Putnam’s theory about social cap...
Confidence in charitable organizations (charitable confidence) would seem to be an important prerequ...
Sustained volunteering represents an aim difficult to achieve in the context of non-profit organizat...
The article examines the category of trust as a key characteristic of a developed human society. Vol...
There is limited understanding of how attitudinal variables such as generalized trust influence form...
The phenomenon of volunteering reveals itself through the time a person spends for volunteering, thr...
In this research the effects of social trust, the trust in unknown others, and institutional trust, ...
In this research the effects of social trust, the trust in unknown others, and institutional trust, ...
Researchers have examined whether societal developments such as educational expansion, secularizatio...
The relation of giving money to charitable causes and volunteering for an association is examined in...
Item does not contain fulltextThis study reflects upon differences in generalized trust levels among...
This study examines whether volunteering for not-for-profit Organizations (NPOs) which are involved ...
Origins and consequences of charitable confidence are investigated with the Giving in the Netherland...
According to a popular version of social capital theory, civic engagement should produce generalized...
Over fifty percent of all people are a member of at least one association and about one-third say to...
Since the mid 1990s, following the reception in Australia of Robert Putnam’s theory about social cap...