您好,欢迎访问新航道官网雅思频道!我们更懂雅思!

在线咨询

雅思 (IELTS)

雅思官方白金级合作伙伴

2018新航道秋季班

您当前的位置 » 新航道官网 » 雅思 » 雅思听力 » 文章正文

雅思听力文章之为什么我们会担心信任

2013-12-12 11:10     供稿单位: 新航道    

出国英语考试有哪些 雅思6.5是什么水平 雅思阅读评分标准 托福阅读评分标准 雅思和托福的区别

 This is IN THE NEWS in VOA Special English.               

Think of your family or friends. How well would those relationships work without trust -- or with a broken trust?
 
Recently, Forbes magazine declared Tiger Woods the first athlete to reach one billion dollars in career earnings. That includes winnings, appearances, product endorsements and more.
 
The Associated Press just voted him "athlete of the decade." But more than half the votes arrived before his private life hit the news.
 
The young golfer has admitted being unfaithful to his wife and family. Public opinion of him has fallen. Some companies have removed him from their advertising. Tiger Woods is now taking what he calls "an indefinite break from professional golf."
 
Trust also plays into much bigger issues, like reaching a climate change agreement or reforming a health care system.
 
Two different researchers have recently studied the effects of trust within countries.
 
Pelle Ahlerup is an economics researcher at Sweden's University of Gothenburg. His research suggests that trust between people is more important in countries with a weak legal system. And in societies where there is less trust between people, the quality of the legal system plays a larger part.
 
He says projects designed to increase interpersonal trust can have a major effect in poor countries with undependable legal systems. Earlier research has shown that countries with greater trust between people generally do better in economic growth and other areas.
 
What about trust in government -- could it even affect murder rates? A historian at Ohio State University argues yes in a new book called "American Homicide."
 
Randolph Roth studied homicide rates over the past four hundred years in parts of the United States and western Europe. The Justice Department says rates in recent years fell to levels last seen in the middle of the nineteen sixties. Still, murder rates in the United States have generally been among the highest among Western democracies since the middle of the nineteenth century.
 
Professor Roth says poverty and unemployment do not lead to higher murder rates. Nor do stronger punishments and more police keep murder rates down.
 
He looked at murder among unrelated adults and found four things that relate to homicide rates. One is a belief that a government is stable and that the justice and legal systems are fair and effective. Another is a feeling of trust in government officials.
 
The third factor is a sense of pride in country and unity with other citizens. And the fourth is a belief that a person's position in society is satisfactory and that getting respect does not require violence.
 
When these feelings are strong, he says, murder rates are generally low. Rates are higher when people do not trust their leaders or feel protected or connected to society. But Professor Roth says even the best political leaders cannot unite a country once a society's problems get out of control.
 
And that's IN THE NEWS in VOA Special English, written by Brianna Blake. I'm Steve Ember.
 
以上就是新航道雅思频道为大家整理的雅思听力文章之为什么我们会担心信任,希望对大家有帮助,更多资讯、资料请访问新航道雅思听力频道 https://www.xhd.cn/ielts/tingli/
 
分享到:
新航道,英语成功之道。时间获取新航道英语学习资料和新鲜资讯,请在微信公众账号中搜索「新航道英语」或者「xhdenglish」,或用手机扫描左方二维码,即可获得新航道每日精华内容推送和英语学习经验分享,并参与新航道举办的各项活动。
责编:李术