Community/Agency Trust and Public Involvement in Resource Planning
- Smith, Jordan W.
Purdue University
smit1547@purdue.edu - Leahy, Jessica E.
University of Maine - Anderson, Dorothy H.
North Carolina State University - Davenport, Mae A.
University of Minnesota
We hypothesize and test a positive relationship between the extent to which local community members trust a management agency and their willingness to engage in resource-related public discourse and involvement. We employ a multilevel generalized mixed model to analyze data collected from five different samples of residents living near managed resource areas. Counter to our proposed hypotheses, results suggest individuals’ level of dispositional trust, their belief that management shares similar values as them, and their trust in the moral competency of the management agency were all found to be significantly and negatively related to public involvement in resource-related activities. These findings suggest that the central role of building trust among local constituents within many planning frameworks needs to be reconsidered with consideration given to both the needs of individuals who trust an agency and the desires of distrusting individuals who are more likely to become involved in public involvement efforts.
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