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series of work packages examined issues of criminalization (when it is appropriate -or not- to use the criminal law), tested the utility of a model of trust-based regulation and explored the dynamics of trust in justice within both the domestic realm (through the 2010 European Social Survey) and at the supranational level (through a new cross-national survey). Finally, the FIDUCIA project tested the central concept (that public trust in justice is critically important for social regulation) in the context of new forms of criminality.infoFIDUCIA has received funding from the European Union’s Seventh Framework Programme for research, technological development and demonstration and was implemented by the University of Parma (leader), the Centre for European Policy Studies, the Center for the Study of Democracy, the European Institute for Crime Prevention and Control affiliated with the United Nations, the Birkbeck College of the University of London,The website of FIDUCIA: www.fiduciaproject.euThe projecttested the central concept (that public trust in justice is critically importantfor social regulation)in the context of new forms of criminalitythe Institute of Political Science of the Hungarian Academy of Sciences, the London School of Economics and Political Sciences, the Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Criminal Law, TeisesInstitutas – Law Institute, the Chancellor, Masters and Scholars of the University of Oxford, the Ankara Strategy Institute, the University of Salamanca and the EPLO.Countries involved in the FIDUCIA project: Italy, Belgium, Bulgaria, Greece, Finland, UK, Hungary, Germany, Lithuania, Turkey, SpainACTIVITY REPORT 2016 121


































































































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