Skip to main content
European Commission logo
English English
CORDIS - EU research results
CORDIS
CORDIS Web 30th anniversary CORDIS Web 30th anniversary

Intermediation and Trust in the Regulatory State: More Regulation, Less Trust?

Project description

Navigating the complex relationship between trust and regulation

In the intricate web of governance, trust and regulation engage in a delicate dance. Sometimes, regulations stem from a foundation of distrust; other times, they serve as a testament to trust. With this in mind, the ERC-funded RegTrust project sheds light on when, how, and why trust and regulation compete, complement, or coexist. Specifically, the project will introduce a novel concept: intermediation as a governance mechanism. Intermediaries, acting as third parties, play a crucial role in certifying products, monitoring compliance, ranking organisations, and so on. They straddle the worlds of trust and regulation, shaping the landscape of governance. Overall, RegTrust maximises the benefits of both trust and regulation, offering insights for policy and politics.

Objective

Regulation is sometimes a manifestation of distrust, but on other times it is a manifestation of trust. When do trust and regulation compete, substitute for and mutually-support each other? How can we maximize the benefits of both? Is the proliferation of rules around us a manifestation of growing distrust or trust? Is the regulatory state necessarily a low-trust state? To answer these questions, RegTrust introduces intermediation as a governance mechanism and intermediaries as third parties in trust and regulatory interactions. Intermediaries certify products, report compliance, rank organizations, label products, monitor performance, screen behavior, whistle-blow misbehavior, and audit organizations. The regulation literature treats them as regulatory actors; the trust literature, as trustees. Yet intermediaries are both trustees and regulatees, both subjects and objects of trust and regulation. Most importantly, they may determine successes and failures, winners and losers, of trust and regulation. At their best, intermediaries reinforce regulation and trust, and promote polycentric (pluralist) structures of governance. At their worst, they undermine trust in regulation, leading to vicious cycles of failure and re/centralization (monocentric governance). RegTrust examines under which conditions, why, how, and to what effects trust and regulation compete, substitute for, or mutually-support each other. We problematize the role of intermediaries, develop a three-actor (triadic) model of governance, and assess its institutional macro-political consequences. Going beyond the state of the art, this project sheds light on the multiple interactions of trust and regulation in policy and politics. It advances the theory of intermediation; advances the interaction of trust and regulation as a central element of the governance literature; And explores the conditions that may make a regulatory state into a high-trust state.

Fields of science (EuroSciVoc)

CORDIS classifies projects with EuroSciVoc, a multilingual taxonomy of fields of science, through a semi-automatic process based on NLP techniques.

You need to log in or register to use this function

Host institution

THE HEBREW UNIVERSITY OF JERUSALEM
Net EU contribution
€ 2 199 625,00
Address
EDMOND J SAFRA CAMPUS GIVAT RAM
91904 Jerusalem
Israel

See on map

Activity type
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Links
Total cost
€ 2 199 625,00

Beneficiaries (4)