The effect of institutional trust on the relationship between social media as an information resource and policy non-compliance: Dutch survey evidence from the COVID-19 pandemic

Publication date

2025-06

Authors

Dekker, RianneORCID 0000-0001-6460-4223ISNI 0000000419578590
Engbersen, Godfried
Snel, Erik
de Boom, Jan

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
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License

cc_by

Abstract

The abundance of information on social media, partly conflicting with government information, might negatively affect citizens’ compliance with policies. Based on Dutch representative survey data from the COVID-19 pandemic, we find that citizens who ranked social media as a more important information resource were generally less compliant with COVID-19 measures and less willing to get vaccinated. A higher ranking of social media is more strongly associated with non-compliance among citizens with lower levels of institutional trust. Based on these findings, we suggest that efforts to encourage compliance should focus not only on countering misinformation, but also on enhancing institutional trust. Points for practitioners: Citizens who ranked social media as a more important information resource on COVID-19 were less compliant with government COVID-19 measures and less willing to get vaccinated. This relationship was strongest among citizens with low levels of trust in the institutions of government involved in managing the pandemic. To enhance compliance with policy measures, government efforts should focus not only on countering misinformation, but also on enhancing trust in government institutions.

Keywords

COVID-19, infodemic, institutional trust, policy compliance, Social media, vaccination intent, Sociology and Political Science, Public Administration, SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being

Citation

Dekker, R, Engbersen, G, Snel, E & de Boom, J 2025, 'The effect of institutional trust on the relationship between social media as an information resource and policy non-compliance : Dutch survey evidence from the COVID-19 pandemic', International Review of Administrative Sciences, vol. 91, no. 2, pp. 259-274. https://doi.org/10.1177/00208523241306410