2022
DOI: 10.3390/socsci11030123
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What Is the Flag We Rally Around? Trust in Information Sources at the Outset of the COVID-19 Pandemic in Latvia

Abstract: Trust in information sources about COVID-19 may influence the public attitude toward the disease and the imposed restrictions, thus determining the course of the COVID-19 pandemic in a given country. Acknowledging an increase in trust in the government or the so-called rally ‘round the flag’ effect around the world at the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, this study explores possible determinants of this effect in Latvia, looking at such variables as the perceived disease risk, gender, age, education, income… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…However, our results demonstrate that these initial increases in trust vary considerably across different institutions and actors. Specifically, we observe larger increases for items most closely related to the main actors during the pandemic, i.e., the national government and parliament, while coefficients for media or other institutions indicate only small to medium changes (see also Baekgaard et al 2023;Rožukalne et al 2022). Consequently, our results illustrate that the rally effect primarily manifests in the national executive and main legislative, while we also observe spillover effects to most other objects of political trust that might have been less directly involved in the crisis management but are perceived through the lens of overall government performance and trustworthiness.…”
Section: Discussion and Summarymentioning
confidence: 86%
“…However, our results demonstrate that these initial increases in trust vary considerably across different institutions and actors. Specifically, we observe larger increases for items most closely related to the main actors during the pandemic, i.e., the national government and parliament, while coefficients for media or other institutions indicate only small to medium changes (see also Baekgaard et al 2023;Rožukalne et al 2022). Consequently, our results illustrate that the rally effect primarily manifests in the national executive and main legislative, while we also observe spillover effects to most other objects of political trust that might have been less directly involved in the crisis management but are perceived through the lens of overall government performance and trustworthiness.…”
Section: Discussion and Summarymentioning
confidence: 86%
“…При этом среди убежденных скептиков уровень обеспокоенности по поводу здоровья в обеих волнах был существенно ниже, чем среди новых скептиков. Это согласуется с наблюдениями других исследователей, согласно которым индивидуальное восприятие риска заболеть может быть нелинейно (U-образно) связано со склонностью к конспирологическому мышлению [Rozukalne et al, 2021].…”
Section: заключениеunclassified
“…Numerous consequences stemming from the pandemic exhibit educational disparities, including health risks linked to on-site employment (Kleinert et al, 2020) or amplified economic inequalities within specific sectors (Adams-Prassl et al, 2020), but also divergent media consumption patterns (Rožukalne et al, 2022), and varying interpretations of government policies and the pandemic's context (Rupar et al, 2023). These findings suggest educational disparities in how individuals have experienced and perceived the pandemic and its consequences, leading to variation in altered trust.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%