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How can we make sense of leadership in the 21st century?

How can we make sense of leadership in the 21st century?
How can we make sense of leadership in the 21st century?
Explores the development of thinking on leadership and places it in the context of the dominant discourses of the period in which studies were conducted. Argues that if a “sense making” paradigm is adopted. it becomes feasible to identify a model of leadership, which is relevant to the context of complexity and change facing organisations in the early twenty-first century. The model emerges when the measure of effectiveness is changed from organisational success to the impact of the leader on followers and on building of capability. The argument for such a shift is underpinned by the movement of dominant organisational logic from a Weberian rational/analytical one to a logic which acknowledges emotional considerations. Within the leadership arena it has been proposed that emotional intelligence is a major factor underpinning success. Presents data from recent research, which empirically demonstrates linkages between emotional intelligence and leadership. These findings are examined in conjunction with the “Emergent model”.
behaviour, intelligence, leadership, organizational change
0143-7739
273-284
Higgs, Malcolm
bd61667f-4b7c-4caf-9d79-aee907c03ae3
Higgs, Malcolm
bd61667f-4b7c-4caf-9d79-aee907c03ae3

Higgs, Malcolm (2003) How can we make sense of leadership in the 21st century? Leadership & Organisational Development Journal, 24 (5), 273-284. (doi:10.1108/01437730310485798).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Explores the development of thinking on leadership and places it in the context of the dominant discourses of the period in which studies were conducted. Argues that if a “sense making” paradigm is adopted. it becomes feasible to identify a model of leadership, which is relevant to the context of complexity and change facing organisations in the early twenty-first century. The model emerges when the measure of effectiveness is changed from organisational success to the impact of the leader on followers and on building of capability. The argument for such a shift is underpinned by the movement of dominant organisational logic from a Weberian rational/analytical one to a logic which acknowledges emotional considerations. Within the leadership arena it has been proposed that emotional intelligence is a major factor underpinning success. Presents data from recent research, which empirically demonstrates linkages between emotional intelligence and leadership. These findings are examined in conjunction with the “Emergent model”.

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More information

Published date: 2003
Keywords: behaviour, intelligence, leadership, organizational change
Organisations: Management

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 51426
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/51426
ISSN: 0143-7739
PURE UUID: a9b70f2e-f20e-4b02-89d5-1491883e70e0
ORCID for Malcolm Higgs: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9032-0416

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 17 Jun 2008
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:57

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