Need an article review on topic of A model of political leadership by Kevin Morrell and Jean Hartley.
Please address all 7 components listed below in article review:
(1) how the topic relates to the principles of the social sciences, (2) the study's research questions or hypotheses, (3) the types of research methods used, (4) the types of data and analysis done, (5) how concepts discussed in class relate to the article, (6) how the topic relates to the challenges, concerns, and contributions of marginalized groups, and (7) the overall contributions of the studies to society.
In today’s interconnected and interdependent world, public leadership has to
be more than just leading public sector organizations. ‘Wicked’ problems that
cross organizational boundaries can only be addressed successfully by networks of
public, private and non-profit organizations, community groups and citizens and
other inter-organizational arrangements (see Chapter 15).
Public leaders are required to manage the consequences of ‘austerity’ measures
that feature in the fiscal policies of many governments, involving unprecedented
programs of public spending cuts. The leadership challenges are not simply
balancing the budget in the short term - new institutional responses and new
strategies have had to be developed.
In this context, public managers are expected to ration or cut services (often
with great impact on vulnerable groups), and restructure public services leading to
de facto privatization. The unprecedented scale and speed of these public
expenditure cuts has created ethical pressures whereby many feel that they have to
make decisions at odds with their professional and moral values. The leadership
challenge in working to develop public support for new strategies can be described
as ‘moving beyond magical thinking’ (Callahan, 2012) that previously expected
increased public services while simultaneously rejecting increased fees or taxes.
In order to solve complex problems, public leaders have to be able to initiate
concerted action not only within their own organizations but among stakeholders
with different and competing interests. A shift to viewing leaders as facilitators of
stakeholder and civic engagement implies that hierarchical and formal forms of
authority do not fully explain the contemporary features of public leadership.
As there are varied, multifaceted challenges in the public sector, likewise there is no
one perspective that fully defines leadership (Yukl, 2002). It is better to see
leadership as a complex multifaceted phenomenon. The complexities of leadership
are driven both internally by personal learning and developing resilience, as well as
externally by the variedness of people, organizations and institutions (Bennis,
2009).
The complex interactions between power and organizational politics
profoundly impact understanding about how leadership works, or does not work.
The authority, power and legitimacy of leaders are potentially contestable, and
conflict suffuses organizational functioning. This applies especially to public
services where it is difficult to see the ‘bottom line’, and where there is much scope
for disagreement on aims and means. There is always a political (small ‘p’)
dimension to leadership: organizational members will often seek ‘… to mobilize
support for or against policies, rules, goals, or other decisions in which the
outcome will have some effect on them.’ (Robbins, 1987, p. 194).
The formal authority that goes with a leader’s role is an important, usually
hierarchically based, source of power (note that formal authority may be an
attribute of a team, board or committee, not just a person). However, formal role
authority is just one power base for organizational leadership. Burnes (2000, pp.
178–9) lists four other kinds:
to cooperate;
make decisions.
Leadership occurs through groups as well as highly placed individuals. Power is
more diffuse than we might imagine, and does not operate only through orthodox
hierarchy. A corollary is that leadership is exercised in a political environment – a
seen and unseen network of relations and tactics that people employ to either
commit to, or dissent from, decisions that affect them. Effective leadership in a
political environment often calls for working with opposition and/or embracing
dissent.
The growth of performance targets and other managerialist approaches may create more ‘macho’ – individualistic and competitive – organizational cultures. In addition it is likely that traditional so-called ‘male’ command-and-control assumptions about leadership are perpetuated by the emphasis on ‘strong’ leadership in the ‘modernizing government’ agenda. A consequent question facing junior women managers is whether opportunity for promotion in an organization is real, or as found in an in-depth research of a large US public organization, the reality was more an ‘illusion of opportunity’ (Ospina, 1996).
The tensions began almost as soon as Labor got into power. Some permanent secretaries departed at the earliest possible moment. Senior press officers went even more quickly. The clashes seemed to subside, but, in reality, they just faded from public view.
References
Gary A. Yukl (2002), Leadership in organizations. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Sonia Ospina (1996), Illusion of opportunity: employee expectations and workplace inequality. Ithaca: ILR of Cornell University Press
Stephen Robbins (1987), Organization theory: concepts, controversies and applications. Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall.
Yiannis Gabriel (1999), Organizations in Depth. London: Sage. John Greenwood (2000), ‘Should the civil service become fully politicized?’, in Lynton Robins and Bill Jones (eds.), Debates in British politics today. Manchester: Manchester University Press: 63–77.
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