Stances in 'Introduction': Political Science - Introduction 1 - Move 1
(1) Select an 'Introduction' right arrow (2) Select a move in that 'Introduction' (What is this?)

Learning Objectives & Strategies:
Explore stances used (A) to make move (B) to support move-making in Move 1
1. Understand what the 3 moves are? ('Introduction' & 3 Moves).
2. Look at the sentences that make move and the stances used.
3. Look at the supporting sentences and the stances used.
4.
Compare why supporting sentences are differnt from move-making sentences.
5. Check out the ratios of stances used (A) to make move only & (B) overall in Move 1.


Title: Trust Your Compatriots, but Count Your Change: The Roles of Trust, Mistrust and Distrust in Democracy
Author(s): Patti Tamara Lenard
Journal: Political Studies 56(2): 312-332.
lause
Making Move?
(Y/N)
Stances
Move 1, "Establish a Territory ," Introduction 1 (*green = Stance Keywords)
1 (Y) generalization of what trust is.

Non Argumentative

Trust is central to human relations of all kinds.

2 (N) support C1 Non Argumentative: to state fact We trust our parents, our friends, our teachers, and so on.
3 (N) support C1 High Argumentative: to proclaim We even trust people more generally, people we have never met,
3.1 (N) support C1 Non Argumentative: to state fact as we go about our daily lives.
4 (N) support C1 Non Argumentative: to state fact We trust our doctor to prescribe the right medications.
5 (N) support C1 Non Argumentative: to state fact We trust people on the street to provide us with accurate directions
6 (N) support C1 Tentative: to indicate a circumstance when we are lost.
7 (N) support C1 Non Argumentative: to state fact We trust our teachers to let us know when we are doing well or poorly in school.
8 (N) support C1 Tentative: to hypothesize The reasons, moreover, that we extend trust to others appear to be as wide-ranging as the situations in which we decide to trust.
9 (N) support C1 Non Argumentative: to state fact We trust people
9.1 (N) support C1 Non Argumentative: to state fact because our intuition tells us they are trustworthy;
9.2 (N) support C1 Non Argumentative: to state fact we think of our intuition as guiding us, for example,
9.3 (N) support C1 Tentative: to indicate a circumstance when we ask a stranger to watch our luggage
9.4 (N) support C1 Tentative: to indicate a circumstance when we use the washroom in the train station.
10 (N) support C1 Non Argumentative: to state fact
We trust experts
10.1 (N) support C1 Non Argumentative: to state fact because they have credentials we recognise;
10.2 (N) support C1 Med Argumentative: to suggest high possibility health and legal professionals often post their diplomas where patients and clients can see them, so as to give them information on which they can base their trust.
11 (N) support C1 Non Argumentative: to state fact We trust others
11.1 (N) support C1 Non Argumentative: to state fact because we have something important in common;
11.2 (N) support C1 Med Argumentative: to suggest high possibility members of ethnocultural groups often extend trust to each other more easily than they do to outsiders.
12 (Y) increasing specificity about what "trust" is Non Argumentative In these situations, trust is an element of human relations –
12.1 (Y) increasing specificity about what "trust" is Non Argumentative trust is something that one person extends to and receives from another – which contains both attitudinal and behavioural elements.
13 (N) support C12 Tentative: to suggest a future condition/situation A trusting person will do something and with a particular attitude, namely, a willingness to put herself in vulnerability with respect to another person (Baier, 1986, pp. 234–40).
14 (N) support C12 Tentative: to indicate a circumstance When we trust someone,
14.1 (N) support C12 Non Argumentative: to state fact we become vulnerable to the possibility of disappointment or betrayal.
15 (N) support C12 Med Argumentative: to suggest higher possibility of Because we cannot know whether a person who is trusted will fulfil this trust (O'Neill, 2002b, p. 6)
15.1 (N) support C12 Non Argumentative: to state fact – the risk of disappointment is inherent in the concept of trust (Warren, 1999a, p. 311).
16 (N) support C12 High Argumentative: to proclaim Trust, as described in this way, is clearly a part of our everyday lives.