Leadership and change implementation in a Russian context
Leadership and change implementation in a Russian context
Leadership literature suggests that the transfer of leadership theory to non-US/Anglo-centric cultures may lead to findings that are different from current ones. Indeed, it is proposed that a dominant national culture will impact both the enacted leadership style and the followers’ expectations and acceptance of such a leadership style. Within the emerging literature on relational and change leadership, there is little consideration of the differing impact of leader behaviours in non-Western cultures. This study addresses both these gaps, through a case study that explores leadership styles and strategic change implementation within a Russian context that is seen as being directive and autocratic. The nature and impact of leadership in the context of change in Russian organizations is explored in this article, using a case-study design. Based on 20 interviews conducted in three organizations, we report findings which suggest, in a Russian context, that a more relational leadership style is more effective, and more likely to be accepted by followers, in implementing strategic change than a more ‘typical’ autocratic and directive style. The article contributes to leadership theory by providing clear empirical evidence of the value of a relational style in non-Western settings in ensuring effective change implementation.
change leadership, change management, relational leadership, Russian culture, strategic change
5-16
Levene, Frank
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Higgs, Malcolm
bd61667f-4b7c-4caf-9d79-aee907c03ae3
Levene, Frank
743f7de4-d85c-476a-ba48-9c60906afb9d
Higgs, Malcolm
bd61667f-4b7c-4caf-9d79-aee907c03ae3
Levene, Frank and Higgs, Malcolm
(2018)
Leadership and change implementation in a Russian context.
Journal of General Management, 44 (1), .
(doi:10.1177/0306307018780406).
Abstract
Leadership literature suggests that the transfer of leadership theory to non-US/Anglo-centric cultures may lead to findings that are different from current ones. Indeed, it is proposed that a dominant national culture will impact both the enacted leadership style and the followers’ expectations and acceptance of such a leadership style. Within the emerging literature on relational and change leadership, there is little consideration of the differing impact of leader behaviours in non-Western cultures. This study addresses both these gaps, through a case study that explores leadership styles and strategic change implementation within a Russian context that is seen as being directive and autocratic. The nature and impact of leadership in the context of change in Russian organizations is explored in this article, using a case-study design. Based on 20 interviews conducted in three organizations, we report findings which suggest, in a Russian context, that a more relational leadership style is more effective, and more likely to be accepted by followers, in implementing strategic change than a more ‘typical’ autocratic and directive style. The article contributes to leadership theory by providing clear empirical evidence of the value of a relational style in non-Western settings in ensuring effective change implementation.
Text
JGMV 13
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 27 February 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 10 October 2018
Keywords:
change leadership, change management, relational leadership, Russian culture, strategic change
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 418635
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/418635
ISSN: 0306-3070
PURE UUID: 57a5e21e-d7a7-42ad-b4e4-576ec92606d7
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Date deposited: 13 Mar 2018 17:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:57
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Author:
Frank Levene
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