This study examines relative trust in national versus local institutions in South Asia using a tripartite framework that combines political and economic performance with religious identity to explain the three categories of relative trust that correspond to individuals whose trust in national institutions is stronger than, equal to, or weaker than their trust in local institutions. In particular, religious minorities in South Asia are often discriminated against and poorly represented at the national level but tend to cluster in local communities, which erodes their trust in national institutions but not necessarily in local institutions. The empirical analysis of two waves of South Asian Barometer surveys eight years apart produced consistent results which suggest that the religious segregation and discrimination in South Asian countries tilt relative trust patterns among religious minorities in favor of local institutions at the expense of national ones.
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July/August 2024
Research Article|
January 29 2024
Political Trust in South Asia Available to Purchase
Gang Guo,
Gang Guo is the Croft Associate Professor of Political Science and International Studies at the University of Mississippi, USA.
Email: <[email protected]>.
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Mahesh Acharya
Mahesh Acharya is a PhD candidate in the Department of Political Science at the University of Mississippi, USA.
Email: <[email protected]>.
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Email: <[email protected]>.
Email: <[email protected]>.
Asian Survey (2024) 64 (4): 545–576.
Citation
Gang Guo, Mahesh Acharya; Political Trust in South Asia. Asian Survey 1 August 2024; 64 (4): 545–576. doi: https://doi.org/10.1525/as.2024.2117071
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