HSE University, Moscow, Russia.
Free University of Berlin, Berlin, Germany.
PLoS One. 2024 Feb 12;19(2):e0295783. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0295783. eCollection 2024.
This study provides new evidence on how historical patterns of household formation shape the present-day level of trust. We test two distinct features of historical family arrangements that might be harmful to trust towards out-groups: (a) family extendedness in terms of the number of household members, and (b) generational hierarchy and gender relations within the household. To conduct our study, we compiled a historical database that reflects family structure and socio-economic development, mostly in the 19th century. The analysis was performed on a sample of 94 historical subnational units within eight contemporary Western and Eastern European countries that participated in the Life in Transition Survey in 2010. We find that cohabitation of several generations within the historical family and power of older generations over the younger are detrimental for out-group trust today. By contrast, family extendedness per se was revealed to have no impact on trust.
这项研究提供了新的证据,表明家庭形成的历史模式如何塑造当今的信任水平。我们检验了历史家庭安排中可能对对外群体信任有害的两个不同特征:(a)家庭规模,即家庭成员的数量,以及(b)家庭内的代际等级和性别关系。为了进行研究,我们编制了一个历史数据库,反映了家庭结构和社会经济发展,主要是在 19 世纪。分析是在 2010 年参与“转型期生活调查”的 8 个西欧和东欧国家的 94 个历史次国家单位的样本上进行的。我们发现,历史家庭中几代人同住以及长辈对晚辈的权力对当今对外群体的信任不利。相比之下,家庭规模本身对信任没有影响。