
Public Leadership
Perspectives and practices
Edited by: Paul `t Hart, John UhrPlease read Conditions of use before downloading the formats.
Description
‘Leadership’ is routinely admired, vilified, ridiculed, invoked, trivialised, explained and speculated about in the media and in everyday conversation. Despite all this talk, there is surprisingly little consensus about how to answer basic questions about the nature, place, role and impact of leadership in contemporary society. This book brings together academics from a broad array of social science disciplines who are interested in contemporary understandings of leadership in the public domain. Their work on political, administrative and civil society leadership represents a stock-take of what we need to know and offers original examples of what we do know about public leadership. Although this volume connects scholars living in, and mostly working on, public leadership in Australia and New Zealand, their contributions have a much broader scope and relevance.
Details
- ISBN (print):
- 9781921536304
- ISBN (online):
- 9781921536311
- Publication date:
- Nov 2008
- Imprint:
- ANU Press
- DOI:
- http://doi.org/10.22459/PL.11.2008
- Series:
- Australia and New Zealand School of Government (ANZSOG)
- Co-publisher:
- The Australia and New Zealand School of Government (ANZSOG)
- Disciplines:
- Arts & Humanities: History; Social Sciences: Gender Studies, Indigenous Studies, Politics & International Studies, Social Policy & Administration
- Countries:
- Australia; Pacific: New Zealand
PDF Chapters
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- Understanding Public Leadership: An Introduction (PDF, 159KB) – Paul ’t Hart and John Uhr doi
Part I: Democracy and Public Leadership
- The Neglected Problem of Democratic Leadership (PDF, 125KB) – John Kane and Haig Patapan doi
- Distributed Authority in a Democracy: The Lattice of Leadership Revisited (PDF, 114KB) – John Uhr doi
- Towards Leader Democracy? (PDF, 122KB) – Jan Pakulski and John Higley doi
Part II: Understanding Public Leadership: Emergent Approaches
- Identity Confers Power: The New View of Leadership in Social Psychology (PDF, 135KB) – John C. Turner and Katherine J. Reynolds and Emina Subasic doi
- Leadership as Response not Reaction: Wisdom and Mindfulness in Public Sector Leadership (PDF, 145KB) – Paul Atkins doi
- Bodies and Persona in Constructing Leadership Capital (PDF, 122KB) – Amanda Sinclair doi
- Perceptions of Leadership (PDF, 146KB) – Keith Dowding doi
- History, Biography and Leadership: Grasping Public Lives (PDF, 122KB) – Barry Gustafson doi
Part III: Spheres of Public Leadership Practices
- The Institutionalisation of Leadership in the Australian Public Service (PDF, 131KB) – Catherine Althaus and John Wanna doi
- Informal Public Leadership: The Case of Social Movements (PDF, 125KB) – David West doi
- Outsiders or Insiders? Strategic Choices for Australian Indigenous Leadership (PDF, 117KB) – Will Sanders doi
- From Bean-Counter to War Leader: National Security and Australian Public Leadership (PDF, 121KB) – Hugh White doi
- Police Leadership in Australia: Managing Networks (PDF, 124KB) – Jenny Fleming and Rob Hall doi
- Political and Media Leadership in the Age of YouTube (PDF, 162KB) – Stuart Cunningham doi
Part IV: Australian Political Leadership
- Is There a Command Culture in Politics? The Canberra Case (PDF, 127KB) – James Walter doi
- Leadership Practices: Reflections on Australian Political Leadership (PDF, 129KB) – David Kemp doi
- Styles of Conservative Leadership in Australian Politics (PDF, 119KB) – Wayne Errington doi
- Reinventing Australian Conservatism in the States: New Leadership and the Liberal Revival under Bolte and Askin (PDF, 126KB) – Norman Abjorensen doi
- The Retiring Premiers: A New Style of Leadership Transition (PDF, 127KB) – Paul Strangio doi
Part V: Political Leadership: New Zealand
- Taming Leadership? Adapting to Institutional Change in New Zealand Politics (PDF, 124KB) – Raymond Miller doi
- Comparing Pathways to Power: Women and Political Leadership in New Zealand (PDF, 125KB) – Jennifer Curtin doi
- Are Women Leaders Different? Margaret Thatcher and Helen Clark (PDF, 117KB) – Marian Simms doi
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