Strategic Leadership

(Jacob Rumans) #1

8 Strategic Leadership


Over the past several decades, efforts to remedy this deficit have been made in a
variety of academic forms and organizational contexts.
As one reads some of the more influential studies of leadership, it soon becomes
obvious that there are any number of common insights and shared findings, though
no single dominant systematic theory (Goethals and Sorenson 2006). Without
claiming anything like an exhaustive explanation of an ever-enlarging body of
knowledge and inquiry, it nevertheless becomes possible to discover common
themes and parallel conclusions, especially concerning the reciprocal relationship
between leaders and followers. Although this is often called the “social exchange”
theory of leadership, the terminology is misleading, for the relationship is typically
much more significant and engaging than the rather mechanical term “exchange”
suggests (Hoyt, Goethals, and Riggio 2006; Messick 2005). A primary focus on
the skills, qualities, practices, styles, contexts, and authority of leaders usually still
involves interpreting leadership as what leaders do to or for others rather than as
engaging definitively with others. Some of the most interesting and promising
motifs for understanding and exercising leadership in academic communities flow
from a relational understanding of leadership.
In order to reveal the core meanings of relational leadership that emerge from
recent studies, we shall use some of the techniques of phenomenological analysis
and description. From this perspective, our task is to ask: What are the defining
characteristics of leadership as a human relational phenomenon? What condi-
tions of possibility have to be satisfied for it to occur? How is it constituted? As
a consequence, what basic meanings does it convey, both tacitly and explicitly?


Leadership as Agency


We discover first that many modern scholars tend to depict leadership as an
activity, as a form of human agency. As agents, humans are self-determining beings
who are in charge of their own conduct. They give form and purpose to their
lives through their choices and actions, as carried out within various systems of
meaning. In this context, leadership is primarily a pattern of engagement and a
relational process within a larger framework of human sense making, rather than
a position of authority in an institutional hierarchy. Leadership is situated in that
sphere of life in which humans forge meanings with others and work towards com-
mon social and institutional goals to fulfill their needs and realize their values.
For Burns (2003), interactive leadership is the crux of historical causality itself, so
leadership as agency is on display in the record of human striving.


Leadership as Fundamental


“Leadership” is both a fundamental and a relational term. It describes the
dynamics of an inescapable form of social interaction by naming the relationship
that occurs between certain individuals (and groups) and those whom they influ-
ence and by whom they are influenced. The relationship has several features, one

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