Getting your message across? The evolution of leader vision and managed pluralisation of leadership

被引:0
作者
Kislov, Roman [1 ,2 ]
Bresnen, Mike [3 ]
Harvey, Gill [4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Manchester Metropolitan Univ, Fac Business & Law, Hlth Policy & Management, Manchester, England
[2] Univ Manchester, Manchester, England
[3] Manchester Metropolitan Univ, Fac Business & Law, Org Studies, Manchester, England
[4] Flinders Univ S Australia, Hlth Serv & Implementat Res, Adelaide, Australia
[5] Flinders Univ S Australia, Caring Futures Inst, Adelaide, Australia
关键词
academic-practitioner collaboration; collective leadership; leadership configuration; leadership pluralisation; leader vision; senior leadership team; university-healthcare partnership; vision evolution; COLLECTIVE LEADERSHIP; HEALTH; POWER; PERFORMANCE; CHARISMA; IDENTITY; ROLES; TEAMS;
D O I
10.1177/00187267241301720
中图分类号
C93 [管理学];
学科分类号
12 ; 1201 ; 1202 ; 120202 ;
摘要
Whereas vision is central to understanding leadership influence in organisations, it has mostly been explored either in predominantly hierarchical or predominantly pluralistic contexts. We know relatively little about how the processual dynamics, content and sources of vision evolve when senior teams are undergoing a transition from hierarchical to collective leadership. Drawing upon a qualitative longitudinal study undertaken within a UK-based academic-practitioner partnership in the healthcare sector, we examine the transitions and transformations in leader vision triggered by deliberate attempts to pluralise leadership arrangements in its senior team. We develop a process model that highlights three stages in the evolution of vision ('problematising', 'debating' and 'accepting') and accounts for variation in how different components of vision develop over time. Our contribution lies in underscoring the heterogeneous, temporally fluid and contested nature of vision; its continuous shaping as a result of the dynamic interplay between individualistic and collectivistic forces; and the multifocal and multidirectional agentic influences involved in its evolution. We argue that managed pluralisation, viewed as an interplay between hierarchical and collective forms of control, leads to accommodation and incorporation of divergent views within the evolving shared vision, facilitating acceptance but diluting the potential of the resulting vision to stimulate change.
引用
收藏
页数:29
相关论文
共 86 条
[1]   Leaders, Power, and the Paradoxical Position: Fantasies for Leaders' Liberation [J].
Abreu Pederzini, Gerardo David .
JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT INQUIRY, 2018, 27 (03) :325-338
[2]   Executive catalysts: Predicting sustainable organizational performance amid complex demands [J].
Akrivou, Kleio ;
Bradbury-Huang, Hilary .
LEADERSHIP QUARTERLY, 2011, 22 (05) :995-1009
[4]   The relationship between vision strength, leadership style, and context [J].
Berson, Y ;
Shamir, B ;
Avolio, BJ ;
Popper, M .
LEADERSHIP QUARTERLY, 2001, 12 (01) :53-73
[5]   Enhancing our understanding of vision in organizations: Toward an integration of leader and follower processes [J].
Berson, Yair ;
Waldman, David A. ;
Pearce, Craig L. .
ORGANIZATIONAL PSYCHOLOGY REVIEW, 2016, 6 (02) :171-191
[6]   Transforming an industry in crisis: Charisma, routinization, and supportive cultural leadership [J].
Beyer, JM ;
Browning, LD .
LEADERSHIP QUARTERLY, 1999, 10 (03) :483-520
[7]   THE PROCESS OF SCHEMA EMERGENCE: ASSIMILATION, DECONSTRUCTION, UNITIZATION AND THE PLURALITY OF ANALOGIES [J].
Bingham, Christopher B. ;
Kahl, Steven J. .
ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, 2013, 56 (01) :14-34
[8]   In defense of being - "Native" the case for insider academic research [J].
Brannick, Teresa ;
Coghlan, David .
ORGANIZATIONAL RESEARCH METHODS, 2007, 10 (01) :59-74
[9]   Hyper-Management: Neoliberal Expansions of Purpose and Leadership [J].
Bromley, Patricia ;
Meyer, John W. .
ORGANIZATION THEORY, 2021, 2 (03)
[10]   A (BLURRY) VISION OF THE FUTURE: HOW LEADER RHETORIC ABOUT ULTIMATE GOALS INFLUENCES PERFORMANCE [J].
Carton, Andrew M. ;
Murphy, Chad ;
Clark, Jonathan R. .
ACADEMY OF MANAGEMENT JOURNAL, 2014, 57 (06) :1544-1570