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Antecedents of Public’s Trust Level Regarding Covid-19 Vaccination: As Reflections of Good Governance in Indonesia
Type of publication
Straipsnis kitame recenzuojamame leidinyje / Article in other peer-reviewed edition (S5)
Type of publication (old)
S4
Author(s)
Latupeirissa, Jonathan Jacob Paul |
Title
Antecedents of Public’s Trust Level Regarding Covid-19 Vaccination: As Reflections of Good Governance in Indonesia
Other Title
Visuomenės pasitikėjimo Covid-19 vakcinacijos atžvilgiu veiksniai: kaip gero valdymo Indonezijoje atspindys
Date Issued
2022
Is part of
Viešoji politika ir administravimas. ISSN 1648-2603, 2022, 21(1)
Field of Science
Abstract
Good governance is an approach to creating good organizational management
founded under the principles of transparency, equity, and accountability to achieve organizational
goals. The rising public demand for good governance has encouraged the central and local
governments to apply transparency and accountability in their administration. Public distrust of the
government in dealing with the Covid-19 pandemic through the vaccine program can be affected by
the level of education, age, political affiliation, religion, and perceived experience. The community
assumes that every action decided by the government always involves political and economic
interests; the government takes advantage of the momentum amidst the calamities suffered by the
community. The purpose of this study is to examine the trust factor, political party, and level of
education in correlation with the influence of the variable level of public trust in the Covid-19 vaccine
program as an embodiment of good governance. This study is descriptive quantitative research. The
primary data used derives from questionnaires distributed via Google Form with a total of 391
respondents. The results from the analysis and discussion indicated that all utilized variables in this
study for both the independent variable of public trust and moderation variables (religion, political
affiliation, and education level) affect the transparency of good governance in the delivery of the
Covid-19 vaccine program. It is also known that the moderation variables consisting of religion,
political affiliation, and the latest education level are considered partial moderation because the
magnitude of the direct influence is greater than the indirect one, meaning that the independent
variable can directly influence the dependent variables without going through or involving
moderation variable.
Type of document
type::text::journal::journal article::research article
Language
Anglų / English (en)
Creative Commons License
Access Rights
Atviroji prieiga / Open Access
File(s)