2026
Public Trust as the Cornerstone of National Security Policy: Legitimacy, Governance, and Risk Management
MYSLÍN, JosefBasic information
Original name
Public Trust as the Cornerstone of National Security Policy: Legitimacy, Governance, and Risk Management
Authors
Edition
Crisis and Resilience, Explorer Press Ltd, 2026, 2978-8420
Other information
Language
English
Type of outcome
Article in a journal
Field of Study
50902 Social sciences, interdisciplinary
Country of publisher
United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
Confidentiality degree
is not subject to a state or trade secret
References:
Organization unit
CEVRO University
Keywords in English
public trust; national security policy; governance; institutional trust; risk management; security governance; hybrid threats
Tags
International impact, Reviewed
Links
MSM 273500006, plan (intention).
Changed: 9/2/2026 01:11, Ing. Josef Myslín, Ph.D., MSc., MPA
Abstract
In the original language
Trust represents a fundamental pillar of contemporary security policy, influencing decision-making processes, institutional stability, and the effectiveness of security measures at both national and international levels. This article explores trust as a key precondition for the formulation and implementation of security policy, emphasizing its role in relations between states, within security institutions, and between public authorities and society. The analysis focuses on trust as a multidimensional concept encompassing political legitimacy, transparency, accountability, and the credibility of security actors. Particular attention is paid to the consequences of declining trust, including increased social polarization, weakened resilience of democratic systems, and reduced effectiveness of collective security arrangements. The article argues that building and maintaining trust is not merely a normative objective, but a strategic necessity for ensuring long-term security and stability in an increasingly complex and uncertain security environment.Through comparative analysis of selected European states (Finland, Germany, Czech Republic, Poland, Hungary, France, and Estonia), the paper identifies critical determinants of trust, including transparency, institutional neutrality, crisis communication, and historical path-dependence. The findings demonstrate that trust acts as both an input to and an output of security policy, reinforcing legitimacy through reciprocity between citizens and the state.The article concludes that sustained trust-building must be recognized as a strategic dimension of security governance. Trust-based security strengthens societal resilience, mitigates polarization, and enhances adaptive capacity in hybrid threat environments.