Radical trust
Radical trust is the confidence that any structured
One of the first appearances of the notion of radical trust appears in an info graphic outlining the base principles of
This concept is considered to be an underlying assumption of Library 2.0. The adoption of radical trust by a library would require its management let go of some of its control over the library and building an organization without an end result in mind. (Harris, 2006). The direction a library would take would be based on input provided by people through online communities. These changes in the organization may merely be anecdotal in nature, making this method of organization management dramatically distinct from data-based or evidence based management.
In marketing, Collin Douma further describes the notion of radical trust in the article "Radical Trust" [2] August 28, 2006
References
- ^ Schertz, Mary. Living by the Word. The Christian Century. Chicago: Sep 4, 2007. Vol. 124, (18) pg. 18-19.
- O'Reilly, Tim. What is Web 2.0 [3]. Design Patterns and Business Models for the Next Generation of Software, Sept 30, 2005. Wikipedia listed as primary example of radical trust.
- Douma, Collin. Radical Trust. Marketing Magazine [4]. August 28. 2006
- Douma, Collin. What is Radical Trust? [5] Oct 1, 2006
- [6] Chan, Sebastian and Jim Spadaccini. Radical Trust: The State of the Museum Blogosphere
- [7] Fichter, Darlene. Web 2.0, Library 2.0 and Radical Trust: A First Take. April 2, 2006.
- Harris, Christopher. A Matter of (Radical) Trust. School Library Journal. New York: Nov 2006. Vol. 52, (11) pg. 24.
- Kimberly Bolan, Meg Canada, Rob Cullin. Web, Library, and Teen Services 2.0. Young Adult Library Services. Chicago: Winter 2007. Vol. 5, Iss. 2; pg. 40-43.