Trust is an important factor in risk management, affecting judgements of risk and benefit, technology acceptance and other forms of cooperation. In this book the world's leading risk researchers explore all aspects of trust as it relates to risk management and communication. The authors draw on a wide variety of disciplinary approaches and empirical case studies on topics such as mobile phone technology, well-known food accidents and crises, wetland management, smallpox vaccination, cooperative risk management of US forests and the disposal of the Brent Spar oil drilling platform.The book integrates diverse research traditions and provides new insights into the phenomenon of trust, including the factors that lead to the establishment and erosion of trust. Insightful analyses are provided for researchers and students of environmental and social science and professionals engaged in risk management and communication in both public and private sectors.Preface1.Trust, Risk Perception and the TCC Model of Cooperation2.Social Identity and the Group Context of Trust: Managing Risk and Building Trust through Belonging3.Trust and Risk: Implications for Management4. A Social Judgement Analysis of Trust: People as Intuitive Detection Theorists5.Scepticism, Reliance and Risk Managing Institutions: Towards a Conceptual Model of Critical Trust?6.Societal Trust in Risk Analysis: Implications for the Interface of Risk Assessment and Risk Management7.Rebuilding Consumer Trust in the Context of a Food Crisis8.Trust and Risk in Smallpox Vaccination9.The What, How and When of Social Reliance and Cooperative Risk Management10.Getting Out of the Swamp: Towards Understanding Sources of Local Officials11.Trust in Wetlands Management12.Antecedents of System Trust: Cues and Process Feedback13.Trust and Confidence in Crisis Communication: Three Case StudiesAn excellent collection of texts that can be recommended both to researchers and to others interested in cooperative risk management... SielC