Bilgic, Ali Trust in world politics: converting 'identity' into a source of security through trust-learning In the discipline of international relations, the concept of trust has been theorised in two ways: the 'rationalist' approach and the 'normative' approach. This article aims to show that these approaches do not adequately reflect how trust operates in world politics and that trust provides a new way of understanding the identity-security nexus in international relations. It is argued that as actors learn to trust each other, this trust-learning process has a transformative effect on their definition of self-interests and identities. The elaborated understanding of trust in the security dilemma is operationalised in terms of the immigration security dilemma. Identity;Immigration;Security;Security dilemma;Trust;Political Science not elsewhere classified 2017-08-24
    https://repository.lboro.ac.uk/articles/journal_contribution/Trust_in_world_politics_converting_identity_into_a_source_of_security_through_trust-learning/9468575