Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-jr42d Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-19T20:13:47.357Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

6 - Political leadership and its development

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 December 2011

Ashley Weinberg
Affiliation:
University of Salford
Get access

Summary

Introduction:

The literature about political leadership is relatively sparse, and somewhat disparate, across psychology, sociology and political science, with relatively few studies taking an integrative approach (Hartley and Benington, 2011; Morrell and Hartley, 2006). In that sense, not much has changed since the comment by one of the founders of the leadership field, Stogdill, who noted: ‘Leadership in various segments of the population (students, military personnel and businessmen) [has] been heavily researched while others (politicians, labour leaders, and criminal leaders) have been relatively neglected’ (quoted in Blondel, 1987, p. 1). In the generic leadership literature, charismatic and highly visible leaders, such as J. F. Kennedy, Thatcher or Mandela, are widely quoted as examples of leadership, but only rarely is the political, policy and public context of their work acknowledged (though see Burns, 1978; Heifetz, 1994; Tucker, 1995). Instead, they are often treated as examples of typical – if somewhat heroic – leadership and the distinctiveness of their political leadership occluded. On the other hand, the disciplines concerned with politicians, such as political science and public administration, have neglected political leadership in part with their greater focus on institutions and regimes, and also because the traditional view was that politicians (national and local) make policy while public servants executed that policy, leaving little room for leadership (Hartley, 2010a; Behn, 1998). For politicians, leadership, other than by very senior figures such as prime ministers and presidents, was not countenanced because their work was mandated by their political party, their manifesto and the electorate. Leadership development was also irrelevant because performance would be judged at the ballot box, and in the interim, at the despatch box.

That situation has changed quite substantially, at least in the UK, from the early 1990s. The worldwide interest in public sector reform (Pollitt and Bouckaert, 2004) has been accompanied by a language more receptive to the idea of leadership. This is partly because there is now a recognition that public policy and public management needs to go beyond traditional hierarchical administration and beyond ‘new public management’, with the more recent paradigm shift to ‘networked governance’ (Benington, 2000; Stoker, 2006b; Newman, 2001). Within networked governance, it is widely recognised that public sector renewal has resulted in a weakening of the hierarchically organised state in favour of more differentiated partnership arrangements that cut across the boundaries of the public, private and voluntary sectors. Additionally, governance is polycentric in that governance operates simultaneously across different tiers or levels of government (Benington and Hartley, 2009). Managing the tensions and paradoxes of these governance regimes has become the order of the day for politicians and public managers, strengthening the need for leadership (Pedersen and Hartley, 2008). Political leadership is increasingly important to deal with the complex cross-cutting problems of society (Benington and Hartley, 2009) and to work within such polycentric, networked governance arrangements.

Type
Chapter
Information
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2011

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Behn, R. 1998 What right do public managers have to lead?Public Administration Review 58 209CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benington, J. 2000 The modernization and improvement of government and public servicesPublic Money and Management3CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benington, J.Hartley, J. 2009 Whole Systems Go! Leadership across the Whole Public Service SystemLondonNational School of GovernmentGoogle Scholar
Benington, J.Moore, J. 2011 Public Value: Theory and PracticeBasingstokePalgrave MacmillanCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Blondel, J. 1987 Political Leadership: Towards a General AnalysisLondonSageGoogle Scholar
Boyatzis, R. E. 1994 Beyond competence: The choice to be a leaderHuman Resource Management Review 3 1CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boyatzis, R. E. 2006 Leadership competenciesBurke, R.Cooper, C. L.Inspiring Leaders119LondonRoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Bryman, A. 1992 Charisma and Leadership in OrganizationsLondonSageGoogle Scholar
Burns, J. 1978 LeadershipNew YorkHarper and RowGoogle Scholar
Crick, B. 2000 In Defence of PoliticsLondonContinuumGoogle Scholar
Day, D. 2001 Leadership development: a review in contextLeadership Quarterly 11 581CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dewey, 1927 The Public and Its ProblemsNew YorkH. Holt and CoGoogle Scholar
Douglas, C.Ammeter, A 2004 An examination of leader political skill and its effect on ratings of leader effectivenessLeadership Quarterly 15 537CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fletcher, C. 2007 Appraisal, Feedback and Development: Making Performance Review WorkAbingdonRoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Fletcher, C.Baldry, C. 1999 Multi-source feedback systems: a research perspectiveCooper, C. L.Robertson, I. T.International Review of Industrial and Organizational Psychology XIV 149LondonJohn WileyGoogle Scholar
Grint, K. 2000 The Arts of LeadershipOxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Grint, K. 2005 Problems, problems, problems: the social construction of ‘leadershipHuman Relations 58 1467CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hartley, J. 2002 Leading communities: capabilities and culturesLeadership and Organizational Development Journal 23 419CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hartley, J. 2004 Civic Leadership. Briefing Paper for the Review of Public Administration in Northern IrelandBelfastNorthern Ireland OfficeGoogle Scholar
Hartley, J. 2010 Public sector leadership and management developmentGold, J.Thorpe, R.Mumford, A.Gower Handbook of Leadership and Management Development531FarnhamGowerGoogle Scholar
Hartley, J. 2010 Political leadershipBrookes, S.Grint, K.The Public Leadership ChallengeLondonPalgraveGoogle Scholar
Hartley, J.Allison, M. 2000 The role of leadership in modernisation and improvement of public servicePublic Money and Management 20 35CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hartley, J.Benington, J. 2010 Leadership for HealthcareBristolPolicy PressCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hartley, J.Benington, J. 2011 Political leadershipBryman, A.Jackson, B.Grint, K.Uhl-Bien, M.Sage Handbook of LeadershipLondonSageGoogle Scholar
Hartley, J.Fletcher, C. 2008 Leadership with political awareness: leadership across diverse interests inside and outside the organizationJames, K.Collins, J.Leadership Perspectives: Knowledge into Action157LondonPalgraveGoogle Scholar
Hartley, J.Morgan-Thomas, A. 2003
Hartley, J.Pinder, K. 2010 Coaching political leadersPassmore, J.Leadership in Coaching159LondonKogan PageGoogle Scholar
Heifetz, R. 1994 Leadership Without Easy AnswersCambridge, Mass.Harvard University PressGoogle Scholar
Hoggett, P. 2006 Conflict, ambivalence and the contested purpose of public organizationsHuman Relations 59 175CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kanungo, R.Sasi, M. 1992 Managerial resourcefulness: a reconceptualisation of management skillsHuman Relations 45 1311CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kline, P. 2000 Handbook of Psychological TestingLondonRoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Leach, S.Hartley, J.Lowndes, V.Wilson, D.Downe, J. 2005 Local Political Leadership in England and WalesYorkJoseph Rowntree FoundationGoogle Scholar
Leach, S.Wilson, D. 2000 Local Political LeadershipBristolPolicy PressGoogle Scholar
Leftwich, A. 2004 What Is Politics?CambridgePolity PressGoogle Scholar
Moore, M. 1995 Creating Public ValueCambridge, Mass.Harvard University PressGoogle Scholar
Morrell, K.Hartley, J. 2006 Ethics in leadership: the case of local politiciansLocal Government Studies 32 55CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morrell, K.Hartley, J. 2006 A model of political leadershipHuman Relations 59 483CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Newman, J. 2001 Modernising Governance: New Labour, Policy and SocietyLondonSageGoogle Scholar
Pedersen, D.Hartley, J. 2008 The changing context of public leadership and management: implications for roles and dynamicsInternational Journal of Public Sector Management 21 327CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pinder, K.Hartley, J. 2005 Political Leadership Development Booklet: a Resource for Elected MembersCoventryInstitute of Governance and Public ManagementGoogle Scholar
Pollitt, C.Bouckaert, G. 2004 Public Management Reform: a Comparative AnalysisOxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Porter, L.McLaughlin, G. 2006 Leadership and the organizational context: like the weather?Leadership Quarterly 17 559CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ruscio, K. 2004 The Leadership Dilemma in Modern DemocracyCheltenhamEdward ElgarGoogle Scholar
Rust, J.Golombok, S. 1999 Modern Psychometrics: the Science of Psychological AssessmentLondonRoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Salam, S.Cox, J.Sims, H. 1997 In the eye of the beholder: how leadership relates to 360 degree performance ratingsGroup and Organization Management 22 185CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Simpson, J. 2008 The Politics of LeadershipLondonLeading Edge PublicationsGoogle Scholar
Stoker, G 2006 Why Politics Matters: Making Democracy WorkLondonPalgrave MacmillanGoogle Scholar
Stoker, G 2006 Public value management: a new narrative for networked governance?American Review of Public Administration 36 41CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Taylor, M. 1993 The Four Axes of Civic LeadershipResearch paper. Local Government Centre, University of WarwickGoogle Scholar
Thach, E. 2002 The impact of executive coaching and 360 feedback on leadership effectivenessLeadership and Organization Development Journal 23 205CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tucker, R. 1995 Politics as LeadershipColumbiaUniversity of Missouri PressGoogle Scholar
Wren, T. 2007 Inventing Leadership: The Challenge of DemocracyCheltenhamEdward ElgarCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Yukl, G. 2006 Leadership in OrganizationsUpper Saddle River, N.J.Pearson Prentice HallGoogle Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

Available formats
×