With the dawn of research into leader-behaviors, scholars
differentiated between being task-oriented, which is important, and
also being people-oriented. People matter. And we tend to guard
against leader attitudes that treat persons as objects, as passive
or inert, as instruments, as so much clay to be shaped and molded.
Hannah Arendt (1958) rejected the idea that leadership is like
work, in which a craftsman picks up the raw materials and the
requisite tools in order to create a product according to an image
in his head. No, she said, leadership is social action in which we
all participate, each with his or her unique and creative
spontaneity, collaborating in an erratic cascade toward the future.
Leadership is something people do together. And to achieve that
vision, we must acknowledge each other as persons and not as
figures in a ledger or pieces on a chessboard. This volume is
intended as a call to be curious about what we take for granted as
individuals, educators, and leaders. In essence to ask ourselves
the more difficult questions about who we are as we recognize our
need for others within a community? What does it mean to be a
person and to recognize another's personhood? Nathan Harter (2021)
draws us into a space to dialogue with ourselves about the notion
of personhood as leaders. "So, what does it mean to be a person?
And what does it mean to treat someone as a person? What does
anyone owe another person?" (p. 4). In what way then do leaders
contend with such questions as they are becoming; becoming better
leaders, becoming better individuals, becoming their sacred selves.
A person-centered ethic would be universal in scope, yet adapted to
local conditions that many leaders must deal with on a daily basis.
Nearly every religion already addresses both what it means to
become a person and what one owes a person ethically, regardless of
race, ethnicity, nationality, or other affiliation. Regardless if
organizations deal directly with the notion of personhood, leaders
deal with the workplace challenges of which the human bring him or
her entire self to the unit. Hence, a comprehensive and integrate
context forces us to revisit our assumptions about who exactly is a
person and what they might deserve. This volume would bring those
voices into conversation. In addition, we intend to complicate the
question by extending similar questions into emerging areas of
increasing relevance in a technological age that crosses geographic
boundaries, such as online presences, corporate entities, and the
prospects of Artificial Intelligence. If anything, an expanded
interdisciplinary and global context makes this volume relevant and
timely for leaders and leadership studies across multiple fields of
study and professions.
General
Imprint: |
Information Age Publishing
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
2023 |
Editors: |
Lemuel W. Watson
|
Dimensions: |
234 x 156mm (L x W) |
Pages: |
200 |
ISBN-13: |
979-88-87301-30-3 |
Categories: |
Books
|
LSN: |
XJ0-UNW-JGU-4 |
Barcode: |
9798887301303 |
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