PSYCHOLOGIA
Online ISSN : 1347-5916
Print ISSN : 0033-2852
ISSN-L : 0033-2852
TRUST WITHIN A COMMUNITY IS A DOUBLE-EDGED SWORD: TRUST HAS A POSITIVE INDIVIDUAL-LEVEL EFFECT AND A NEGATIVE CONTEXTUAL EFFECT ON SUBJECTIVE WELL-BEING
Shintaro FUKUSHIMAKosuke TAKEMURAYukiko UCHIDASatoshi ASANONoboru OKUDA
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2018 年 61 巻 2 号 p. 113-123

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Previous studies have found that trust has a positive effect on subjective well-being. However, when trust is accumulated within a community, it can create expectations of trustworthiness and consequently be transformed into shared social norms. We hypothesized that trust toward community members (i.e., community trust) would have a positive effect on well-being at the individual level. Further, we anticipated that it would have a negative contextual effect on subjective well-being at the community level, because it constrains individual freedom by constructing shared norms within a community. We mailed our survey to each household across 105 randomly-sampled communities in the Yasu River watershed in Shiga prefecture, Japan. We conducted multilevel analyses using the survey data (Nindivdual = 3,116, Ncommunity = 99). As predicted, the results showed that community trust had a positive effect on subjective well-being at the individual level and a negative contextual effect at the community level. This suggests that living in a community where residents trust each other may dampen one’s subjective well-being. Implications for studies on happiness and social dynamics are discussed.

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