Political leadership in Korea
In: Publications on Asia of the Institute for Comparative and Foreign Area Studies, 27
35969 Ergebnisse
Sortierung:
In: Publications on Asia of the Institute for Comparative and Foreign Area Studies, 27
World Affairs Online
In: Public administration review: PAR, Band 35, Heft 6, S. 652
ISSN: 1540-6210
In: The Journal of social, political and economic studies, Band 17, Heft 3 and 4
ISSN: 0278-839X, 0193-5941
The ascendence of particular leaders as the heirs of a revolution depends on whether the revolution was part of a politically `spontaneous' movement or was a `planned' program for the specific overthrow of the regime. Examines the dynamics that facilitate the ascension to leadership in post-revolutionary states.
In: Studies in Politics, Security and Society Volume 10
In: Small Business Economics, Forthcoming
SSRN
In: Policy & politics, Band 7, Heft 4, S. 395-408
ISSN: 1470-8442
The recent publication of Jones and Norton's Political Leadership in Local Government is an opportunity to assess the state of local leadership studies in the UK. A critical review of this volume is offered and some possible reasons for the dearth of systematic studies of leadership resources and behaviour discussed. Contrasts are drawn with the work of American scholars in this field and some aspects of the more analytical approach found in the US work are examined.
In: Juncture: incorporating PPR, Band 21, Heft 2, S. 122-130
ISSN: 2050-5876
Michael Kenny and Nick Pearce ask how political leadership might be rehabilitated in the current anti‐political climate, and argue that a widely held desire for popular self‐government requires new kinds of leadership that can direct this sensibility towards, rather than against, democracy itself.
In: American political science review, Band 71, Heft 1, S. 266-275
ISSN: 1537-5943
To develop a general theory of leadership we must locate the function of political leadership in a theory of historical causation. One may begin by identifying sources of leadership in the wants and needs, aspirations and expectations, of humankind. In helping to gratify these "motive-bases," leaders move followers "up" the hierarchy of needs and other motivations and thus create new social configurations in which leaders act. As persons–especially children-move "up" through stages of morality, they also create structures of values that both empower and constrain would-be leaders. Leadership over human beings is exercised when would-be leaders, possessing certain motives of their own, mobilize their own psychological, institutional, pohtical, and other resources relevant to potential followers' motive bases in such a way as to satisfy the motives of both leaders and followers. The test of leadership is the achievement of goals of both leaders and followers in a context of open conflict over ends and means, with leaders and followers mutually and freely defining their values and purposes.
Those who do not read Japanese seldom have access to analytic studies of the fascinating and surprisingly diverse world of contemporary Japanese political leadership. This volume constitutes a step toward bringing to the English reader some sense of the norms, beliefs, styles, and modes of exercising power of Japanese political leaders and the organizational and political contexts which are changing leadership role expectations. The second volume in this series concentrates more explicitly on leadership recruitment, although the subject is also addressed here. All of the essays in this volume highlight specific politicians, while attempting to develop analytic categories to understand the broader significance of these types of leaders. Included are the following: a Liberal Democratic Party prime minister and faction leader (Fukuda Takeo) who rose "almost effortlessly" to the pinnacle of power on the basis of an elitist educational and bureaucratic career background and another (Tanaka Kakuei) who took advantage of the chaotic wartime and immediate postwar period to overcome the limitations of his commoner background by developing an entrepreneurial style that makes him even today "the most powerful in Japan"; a younger conservative leader (Kono Yohei) who, with certain others of his generation, found life within the restrictive but predictable career paths of ruling Liberal Democrats less attractive than the risky option of forming his own New Liberal Club; an unconventional Socialist chairman (Asukata Ichio) who bucks the pull toward coalition making among the opposition parties in favor of his belief that this major but perpetual opposition party must first reconstruct itself and structure a new popular consensus that can legitimize a coalitional alternative to the Liberal Democrats; parliamentary leaders (like lower-house speaker Maeo Shigesaburo, directors of the House Management Committee, and heads of the Diet policy committees of the various parties) who are projected into increasingly influential roles by changing electoral trends and popular expectations; an innovative and dynamic mayor (Suzuki Heizaburo) who, taking advantage of the considerable authority afforded by Japan's "presidential" system of local chief executives, pursues his own priorities, mobilizing the requisite support despite the lack of national guidance and the oppositions of former backers; and the "power behind the throne" (Matsunaga Yasuzaemon and Komori Takeshi) whose visions move prime ministers and governors as well as their own followers in powerful public and private bureaucracies.
BASE
In: https://dspace.library.uu.nl/handle/1874/395583
This chapter surveys how the field has addressed the central puzzles of political leadership by discussing several key dichotomies that have been the focal point of scholarly inquiry and debate past and present: leaders and leadership; democrats and dictators; causes and consequences; actors and context; personal qualities and luck; success and failure; and art and science. The authors conclude that the study of leadership is a somewhat bewildering enterprise because there is no unified theory of leadership. There are too many definitions, and too many theories in too many disciplines. They do not agree on the meaning of leadership, on how to study it, or even why we study it. The subject is not just beset by dichotomies; it is also multifaceted, and essentially contested. Finally, the authors provide a brief conspectus of the Handbook.
BASE
In: Nelson-Hall series in political science
World Affairs Online
In: Political studies, Band 12, Heft 3, S. 341-354
ISSN: 0032-3217
The notion of `charisma' (CHM) as used to describe certain.
In: The Journal of social, political and economic studies, Band 17, Heft 3-4, S. 417
ISSN: 0278-839X, 0193-5941
In: Comparative studies of political life