J 2025

Building Trust in Governmental and Educational Authorities in Adolescence : A Comparison of Early, Middle, and Late Adolescents in Four European Countries

BROJÁČ, Jakub; Jan ŠEREK; Simon FORSTMEIER; Ana ĐORĐEVIĆ; Vujo ILIĆ et. al.

Basic information

Original name

Building Trust in Governmental and Educational Authorities in Adolescence : A Comparison of Early, Middle, and Late Adolescents in Four European Countries

Authors

BROJÁČ, Jakub; Jan ŠEREK; Simon FORSTMEIER; Ana ĐORĐEVIĆ; Vujo ILIĆ; Enrico PADOAN; Lenka ŠTĚPÁNKOVÁ; Anne MÖBERT; Anna MASLING; Francesco MARANGONI and Jana FIKRLOVÁ

Edition

Journal of Youth and Adolescence, New York, Springer, 2025, 0047-2891

Other information

Language

English

Type of outcome

Article in a journal

Country of publisher

United States of America

Confidentiality degree

is not subject to a state or trade secret

References:

Organization

Fakulta sociálních studií – Repository – Repository

Keywords in English

Trust; Procedural justice; Adolescence; Institutional trust; Cross-national comparison

Links

MUNI/A/1658/2024, interní kód Repo. 870572, interní kód Repo.
Changed: 5/12/2025 00:51, RNDr. Daniel Jakubík

Abstract

In the original language

Research on procedural justice shows that giving voice to citizens or experts, providing transparent explanations, and acting predictably fosters trust in authorities. Yet little is known about how these processes operate during adolescence. It remains unclear whether these aspects of authority behavior are relevant to trust-building at the onset of adolescence and how their importance evolves with age. This study reports findings from a cross-national vignette experiment involving 2383 adolescents aged 11–12 (31% of the sample), 14–15 (33%), and 18–19 (36%) from Germany (n = 608, 55% female), Italy (n = 426, 44% female), Czechia (n = 724, 51% female), and Serbia (n = 625, 60% female). Results showed that voice and transparency in rationale were the strongest predictors of trust in both school and governmental authorities. In most cases, these effects did not vary significantly with age. Even early adolescents were responsive to procedural justice aspects. Consistent age-related moderations appeared only in the post-communist countries of Czechia and Serbia, where the effects of voices and transparency of rationale on trust increased with age. This suggests that contextual factors can shape adolescents’ developing capacity to evaluate authority behavior. These findings show that adolescents already have the capacity to value procedural justice from early adolescence. However, the delayed effects in post-communist countries underscore the importance of the socio-political context, which may shape the opportunity to learn and apply these procedural justice judgments when forming trust in authorities.

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