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What’s Wrong With Leadership?

Improving Leadership Research and Practice

Ronald E. Riggio

$79.99

Paperback

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English
Routledge
17 September 2018
Leadership practitioners and those who seek to develop leadership are concerned with whether they are using evidence-based best practices to develop leadership capacity in themselves and others. Are we indeed using best practices in the study, practice, and development of leadership? This book seeks to draw attention to the limitations of extant work on leadership, and to provide suggestions for a way forward. Presenting chapters on topics ranging from research methodology, gender and cross-cultural issues in leadership studies, and the role of the humanities in our understanding of leadership, the book represents a rigorous multidisciplinary collaboration.

This is a must-read for graduate students studying leadership, leadership consultants and trainers, leadership scholars, and anyone who practices, teaches, or seeks to develop leadership. It will help expand the horizons of how we think about and practice leadership.

Edited by:  
Imprint:   Routledge
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm, 
Weight:   371g
ISBN:   9781138059405
ISBN 10:   1138059404
Series:   Leadership: Research and Practice
Pages:   306
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Primary
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
1. Introduction: What’s Wrong with Leadership? Improving Leadership Theory, Research, and Practice Ronald E. Riggio Part I: Improving Leadership Methodology, Assessment, and Selection 2. Leadership Research Methods: Progressing Back to Process Maureen E. McCusker, Roseanne J. Foti, and Elsheba K. Abraham 3. Leadership and Levels of Analysis: Clarifications and Fixes for What’s Wrong Francis J. Yammarino and Shelley D. Dionne 4. Leadership Assessment Can Be Better: Directions for Selection and Performance Management Manuel London 5. The Self-Selection Bias in Leadership: Understanding Reluctant Leaders Olga Epitropaki Part II: Increasing the Scope of Leadership Research 6. Leadership and Ethics: You Can Run but You Cannot Hide from the Humanities Joanne B. Ciulla 7. Leadership is Male-Centric: Gender Issues in the Study of Leadership Stefanie K. Johnson and Christina N. Lacerenza 8. Are Leadership Theories Western-Centric? Transcending Cognitive Differences Between the East and the West Kenta Hino 9. Leadership and the Medium of Time Robert G. Lord 10. Leaders are Complex: Expanding Our Understanding of Leader Identity Stefanie P. Shaughnessy and Meredith R. Coats 11. Turning the Blind Eye to Destructive Leadership: The Forgotten Destructive Leaders Birgit Schyns, Pedro Neves, Barbara Wisse, and Michael Knoll Part III: Improving Leadership Practice and Expanding Our Thinking About Leadership 12. Leadership Development Starts Earlier than We Think: Capturing the Capacity of New Leaders to Address the Leader Talent Shortage Susan Elaine Murphy 13. What is Wrong with Leadership Development and What Might Be Done with It? David V. Day and Zhengguang Liu 14. Solving the Problem with Leadership Training: Aligning Contemporary Behavior-Based Training with Mindset Conditioning Alex Leung and Thomas Sy 15. Critical Leadership Studies: Exploring the Dialectics of Leadership David L. Collinson 16. Leadership for What? Eric Guthey, Steve Kempster, and Robyn Remke

Ronald Riggio, Ph.D. is Henry R. Kravis Professor of Leadership and Organizational Psychology at Claremont McKenna College.

Reviews for What’s Wrong With Leadership?: Improving Leadership Research and Practice

Once again, Ronald Riggio has made an important and innovative contribution to our understanding of leadership. Drawing on the contributions of prominent scholars, this new book challenges us to rethink how leadership is conceived, studied, and practiced. It explores the mismeasure of leadership, and how we must broaden our thinking about how leadership happens, for good or ill, if future leaders are to be ethical and effective. - George R. Goethals, University of Richmond, USA Few topics in the social sciences are as important to our world as the study of leadership. However, leadership research has become bogged down in simple behavioral survey studies. This volume presented by Ronald Riggio points to a number of new directions for research that might help reinvigorate the field. It presents alternative methods for conducting research on leadership, examines emergent substantive and theoretical issues, and reconsiders key practical issues in leader selection and development. The authors are among the leading scholars in the field and they lay out an important new agenda for research on leadership. - Michael D. Mumford, The University of Oklahoma, USA


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