Is Shared Leadership the Key to Responsible Leadership?
Document Type
Article
Department
Drucker School of Management (CGU)
Publication Date
2015
Abstract
This article is about responsible leadership and how shared leadership processes can potentially support it. In particular, an emerging literature on the topic of responsible leadership offers promise to refine and move our thinking forward in an integrative way that bridges what we know about corporate social responsibility and leadership. In this article we first define shared leadership and how it is linked to the notion of responsible leadership. We elaborate on the risk of irresponsibility in leadership, which can result from a purely hierarchically based and centrally concentrated influence that does not allow for the natural balance fostered by shared leadership processes, and illustrate this risk through a brief description of irresponsible leadership practices observed in Nigeria by the first two authors. Subsequently, we clarify specific actions that hierarchical leaders can take to facilitate the ongoing development of shared responsible leadership and avoid irresponsible leadership, provide multiple examples of shared responsible leadership based on recent ethnographic research on shared leadership, and offer some concluding thoughts to shape future research and practice regarding responsible leadership.
Rights Information
©2015
DOI
10.5465/amp.2015.017
Recommended Citation
Craig L. Pearce & Wassenaar, C. L. (2015). Shared Leadership in Practice: When Does it Work Best? Academy of Management Perspectives, DOI: 10.5465/amp.2015.017