Leadership

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This should be a page for material on the evolving conceptions of leadership in a distributed environment.


See the related entries on Peer Governance (see for subheading in the alphabetic listing of the P2P Encyclopedia), on Leaderless Organizations, and on Voluntary Leadership.


Joseph Rost on the new leadership requirements

From an interview with Russ Volckman, at http://www.leadcoach.com/JRostInt.html

Here is a summary of Rost’s proposals:

(1) Stop concentrating on the leader.


• Get rid of the emphasis on leader traits and personality characteristics.

• Get rid of the lists of leader behaviors.

• Get rid of all tests or inventories for leaders.

• Get rid of the notion that we have to develop leaders.


(2) Conceive of leadership as an episodic affair. Here are some suggestions.


• Don’t train people to think of leadership as good management so that everything a good manager does is leadership.

• Get rid of the notion that leadership is only what works, that leadership is always a successful process, that leadership is high performance…

• Train people to think about the process that leadership is.

• Train people to think of leadership as a specific relationship of people planning a mutually agreeable, real change.

• Have people list the leadership relationships in which they have been participating during a 12 or 24-month period.


(3) Train people to use influence.


(4) Develop people to work within noncoercive relationships. “Noncoercive means that the people in the relationship are able to respond yes or no to an attempt to influence them."

• Train people to base the leadership relationship on mutual influence, not authority or power.

• Help people build relationships around a sense of purpose instead of other more utilitarian objectives.

• Train people to create relationships by having them help people…

Help people understand the nature of real—that is, transformative—change.

• Real Change is almost always political.

• Real change is long term.

• Real change has tremendous symbolic implications, both positive and negative.

• Real change takes place, for the most part, among large groups of people.


(5) Reconstruct people’s basic worldview toward a collaborative orientation.

See also: Joseph C. Rost, “Leadership Development in the New Millennium." The Journal of Leadership Studies", 1993, Vol. 1, No. 1, pp. 92-110.