Building trust: the importance of democratic legitimacy in the formation of consumer attitudes toward drinking water
Journal article, 2019

This study aimed to explore the role of democratic decision legitimacy in the formation of consumer attitudes toward drinking water. Using consumer-level data on the decision to change the drinking water sources in two Swedish cities, three core sets of variables were constructed: (1) the overall democratic decision legitimacy, defined as the citizens' support for the decision; (2) the input, throughput and output dimensions of decision legitimacy, representing the citizens' perceived opportunity to provide input, their ability to oversee, as well as their level of satisfaction with the outcome of the decision-making process; and (3) consumer attitudes toward drinking water, comprising trust, risk perception and acceptance. The results of the study provide support for the proposed mechanism that consumers that perceive a decision-making process more positively also tend to support the ultimate decision more, which in turn helps to establish more positive consumer attitudes towards their drinking water. Consequently, democratic legitimacy is an important precursor for building trust. This is particularly important if a waterborne outbreak has negatively impacted consumers' trust in their water, and when political and engineering decisions must be made.

Trust

Consumer attitudes

Drinking water

Risk perception

Legitimacy

Decision-making process

Author

Mia Bondelind

Chalmers, Architecture and Civil Engineering, Water Environment Technology

Jonas Toljander

National food agency, Sweden

Magnus Simonsson

National food agency, Sweden

Melle Säve-Söderbergh

Karolinska Institutet

National food agency, Sweden

Greg Morrison

Curtin University

Water Policy

1366-7017 (ISSN)

Vol. 21 1 1-18

Areas of Advance

Building Futures (2010-2018)

Subject Categories

Civil Engineering

Environmental Sciences related to Agriculture and Land-use

Public Administration Studies

Political Science (excluding Public Administration Studies and Globalization Studies)

DOI

10.2166/wp.2018.144

More information

Latest update

7/15/2019