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The effects of technical and social conditions on workplace trust
Authors:Betsy Blunsdon  Ken Reed
Institution:1. Bowater School of Management and Marketing, Deakin University, 221 Burwood Highway, Burwood, Vic 3125, Australia (tel: +61 3 92446170;2. fax: +61 3 92446967);3. Deakin University, 221 Burwood Highway, Burwood, Vic 3125, Australia (tel: +61 3 9244 6911;4. e-mail: kreed@deakin.edu.au)
Abstract:This paper investigates the extent to which the technical and social contexts of organizations independently affect levels of workplace trust. We argue that, in an organizational context, trust is not just a relationship between an individual subject (the truster) and an object (the trustee) but is subject to effects from the conditions of the work relationship itself. We describe the organizational context as comprising both a technical system of production (where work gets done through the specification of tasks) and a social system of work (where problems of effort, compliance, conformity and motivation are managed). We analyse the relationship between trust and these two aspects of workplace context (technical and social systems). We also operationalize this in terms of differences between industries, occupational composition and human resource management practices. The model is tested using data drawn from the 1995 Australian Workplace Industrial Relations Survey. The results confirm that differences in industry, occupational composition and HRM practices all impact on levels of workplace trust. We review these results in terms of their implications for future research into the problem of analysing variation in trust at both the workplace and individual levels.
Keywords:Organizational trust  workplace trust  technical conditions of work  social system  human resource practices
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