preview

Leadership in Our World Today

Good Essays

The leadership paradox What is leadership? In the famous US Supreme Court ruling Jacobellis v. Ohio (1964), Justice Potter Stewart attempted to categorize the obvious despite of the lack of clearly defined parameters. Although the case involved another issue, the good Justice’s response “I know it when I see it” is often the knee-jerk response when one is confronted with this question. In the simplest of terms, our experiences tell us that leaders run things, control situations, command troops, direct activities, manage resources, head committees, and are in-charge. They provide guidance, pilot projects, conduct business, show the way, and are out front. It turns out, however, that these are, more-or-less, managerial functions. The leader has always been that person who, by virtue of an appointment to his/her position by frankly, some other leader, is generally seen as having positional power based simply on their designation to, and respect for, the office they hold. The term leadership has become a generic term used to describe that ubiquitous group of employees within an organization who, by virtue of their appointment, are the designated leaders within the organization. Within an organization, one often hears something along these lines: “The company leadership team is having their meeting at 1:30pm”. The aforementioned activities, however, account for what a leader does, not what a leader is. A review of the literature revealed endless

Get Access