Trust in Organizations
Frontiers of Theory and Research
Edited by:
- Roderick M. Kramer - Stanford University, Center for the Study of Families and Youth, Stanford University, USA
- Tom R. Tyler - Yale University, USA, New York University, USA, University of California, Berkeley, USA, Northwestern University, USA
November 1995 | 440 pages | SAGE Publications, Inc
"An impressive collection. Roderick M. Kramer and Tom R. Tyler have brought together a set of forefront studies that illuminate the causes and consequences of trusting behavior. This book will help shape the agenda for many years."
--Mayer N. Zald, Department of Sociology,
University of Michigan
"Trust is like bone in an organization--undergirding, supporting, and enabling flesh and blood growth and function. This volume does a remarkable job of illustrating how healthy (versus unhealthy) trust systems develop and of tracing the profound consequences. It represents an invaluable resource for professionals interested in the dynamics of organizational effectiveness."
--Robert B. Cialdini,
Regents Professor of Psychology,
Arizona State University
"Roderick Kramer and Tom Tyler have produced an authoritative and stimulating collection of essays that raise the critical questions about trust. In the process, they challenge rational choice and social science generally to develop better models of negotiation and decisionmaking. Trust in Organizations goes a long way towards providing the foundations for such theorizing."
--Margaret Levi,
Department of Political Science,
University of Washington
Organizational theorists have long recognized the central role that trust plays in organizational life. They have noted that trust facilitates exchanges among individuals, enhances cooperation and coordination, and contributes to more effective social and organizational relationships. Researchers agree that there is a need for a better understanding of trust in organizations. Trust in Organizations is an essential guide that will provide students and professionals in organization studies, management, and public administration with a wealth of knowledge concerning the importance of trust.
Editors Roderick M. Kramer and Tom R. Tyler have assembled a cross-disciplinary group of scholars--from social psychology, behavioral economics, sociology, and organizational theory--to bring together some of the newest and most exciting conceptual perspectives in this field. These contributions also reflect a variety of new methodological approaches to the study of trust. This volume's broad coverage includes discussion of the psychological and social antecedents of trust, the effects of social and organizational structures on trust, and the broad effects of trust on organizational functioning.
Tom R Tyler and Roderick M Kramer
Whither Trust?
W E Douglas Creed and Raymond E Miles
Trust in Organizations
David Kipnis
Trust and Technology
Walter W Powell
Trust-Based Forms of Governance
Ronald S Burt and Marc Knez
Trust and Third-Party Gossip
Lynne G Zucker et al
Collaboration Structure and Information Dilemmas in Biotechnology
Roy J Lewicki and Barbara B Bunker
Developing and Maintaining Trust in Work Relationships
Blair H Sheppard and Marla Tuchinsky
Micro OB and the Network Organization
Debra Meyerson, Roderick M Kramer and Karl Weick
Swift Trust in Temporary Groups
Sim B Sitkin and Darryl Stickel
The Road to Hell
Roderick M Kramer
Divergent Realities and Convergent Disappointments in the Hierarchical Relation
Robert J Bies and Tom Tripp
Beyond Distrust
Aneil K Mishra
Organizational Responses to Crisis
Eugene J Webb
Trust and Crisis
L L Cummings and Philip Bromiley
The Organizational Trust Inventory (OTI)
Tom R Tyler and Peter Degoey
Trust in Organizational Authorities
Roderick M Kramer, Marilynn B Brewer and Benjamin J Hanna
Collective Trust and Collective Action
Joel Brockner and Phyllis Siegel
Understanding the Interaction between Procedural and Distributive Justice