Episode 119

The Rise of Institutional Mistrust

Prof. Ethan Zuckerman

Prof. Ethan Zuckerman discusses how mistrust in governmental, educational, and religious institutions became commonplace, and whether that mistrust can become a catalyst for reform.

Guest headshot of Prof. Ethan Zuckerman

In conversation with

Prof. Ethan Zuckerman

Author of "Mistrust" | Associate Prof. @ University of Massachusetts at Amherst

Photo: Lorrie LeJeune

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Episode 119 with Prof. Ethan Zuckerman, originally published Jun 29, 2024.

How did institutional mistrust become commonplace?

Throughout the 21st century, mistrust in our societal institutions has become commonplace. Regardless of your political leanings, we’ve become skeptical and suspicious of the governmental, educational, and religious institutions meant to support and protect us. How did this happen? What should we do about it? Perhaps, this mistrust is the very catalyst for reform? In today's episode, Prof. Ethan Zuckerman dissects this phenomena.

A guided path through the episode, adapted from the original topic list while preserving the questions that make the show feel like itself.

01

The rise of institutional mistrust

02

Is influencer culture a response to mistrusting institutions?

03

How to transform institutions

04

Social media and worldview differences

Recurring Question

"What books have had an impact on you?"

For Young Listeners

"What advice do you have for teenagers?"

Prof. Ethan Zuckerman is an associate professor of public policy, communication and information at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. He is the founder of the Institute for Digital Public Infrastructure, a research group that is studying and building alternatives to the existing commercial internet. Prof.

Zuckerman is the author of two books: Mistrust: Why Losing Faith in Institutions Provides the Tools to Transform Them and Rewire: Digital Cosmopolitans in the Age of Connection, both published through W.W. Norton. He is also the co-founder of global blogging community Global Voices and works with social change nonprofit organizations around the world.

He is an alumnus of the Berkman Klein Center at Harvard, the MIT Media Lab and Comparative Media Studies at MIT, Geekcorps, and Tripod.