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Challenging humanist leadership: Toward an embodied, ethical, and effective neo-humanist, enlightenment approach

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Challenging humanist leadership: Toward an embodied, ethical, and effective neo-humanist, enlightenment approach. / Knights, David.
In: Leadership, Vol. 17, No. 6, 31.12.2021, p. 674-692.

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Knights D. Challenging humanist leadership: Toward an embodied, ethical, and effective neo-humanist, enlightenment approach. Leadership. 2021 Dec 31;17(6):674-692. Epub 2021 Jun 13. doi: 10.1177/1742715021993641

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@article{fda4ba7c9b6f47e7ab735405e1ef8c62,
title = "Challenging humanist leadership: Toward an embodied, ethical, and effective neo-humanist, enlightenment approach",
abstract = "It can be argued that a humanistic enlightenment approach to leadership emerged as a counter to the historical prevalence of totalitarian elitism where leaders were often autocratic and authoritarian, demanding obedience through command and control. Although beginning with the ancient Greeks, this kind of leadership has continued through classical periods from early medieval times up until the industrial revolution, and also into our modern era. Since the 18th century, philosophies of enlightened humanism have been the face of leadership thinking if not always what might be seen as its embodied practice. Beneath the surface, there lurks a controlling and demanding imposition of self-discipline that can be seen as equally if not more, repressive than the elitism it replaces. This article is concerned to challenge such repression by developing a neo-humanist enlightenment approach to leadership and its development. It departs from those studies that reflect and thereby reproduce individualized preoccupations with, and attachments to, identity on the part of leaders and the so-called followers. The focus, instead, is on an embodied leadership that encourages an ethical engagement with the community, institutions, organizations, and society.",
keywords = "enlightenment, ethics, humanism, identity, Leadership",
author = "David Knights",
year = "2021",
month = dec,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1177/1742715021993641",
language = "English",
volume = "17",
pages = "674--692",
journal = "Leadership",
issn = "1742-7150",
publisher = "SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Challenging humanist leadership

T2 - Toward an embodied, ethical, and effective neo-humanist, enlightenment approach

AU - Knights, David

PY - 2021/12/31

Y1 - 2021/12/31

N2 - It can be argued that a humanistic enlightenment approach to leadership emerged as a counter to the historical prevalence of totalitarian elitism where leaders were often autocratic and authoritarian, demanding obedience through command and control. Although beginning with the ancient Greeks, this kind of leadership has continued through classical periods from early medieval times up until the industrial revolution, and also into our modern era. Since the 18th century, philosophies of enlightened humanism have been the face of leadership thinking if not always what might be seen as its embodied practice. Beneath the surface, there lurks a controlling and demanding imposition of self-discipline that can be seen as equally if not more, repressive than the elitism it replaces. This article is concerned to challenge such repression by developing a neo-humanist enlightenment approach to leadership and its development. It departs from those studies that reflect and thereby reproduce individualized preoccupations with, and attachments to, identity on the part of leaders and the so-called followers. The focus, instead, is on an embodied leadership that encourages an ethical engagement with the community, institutions, organizations, and society.

AB - It can be argued that a humanistic enlightenment approach to leadership emerged as a counter to the historical prevalence of totalitarian elitism where leaders were often autocratic and authoritarian, demanding obedience through command and control. Although beginning with the ancient Greeks, this kind of leadership has continued through classical periods from early medieval times up until the industrial revolution, and also into our modern era. Since the 18th century, philosophies of enlightened humanism have been the face of leadership thinking if not always what might be seen as its embodied practice. Beneath the surface, there lurks a controlling and demanding imposition of self-discipline that can be seen as equally if not more, repressive than the elitism it replaces. This article is concerned to challenge such repression by developing a neo-humanist enlightenment approach to leadership and its development. It departs from those studies that reflect and thereby reproduce individualized preoccupations with, and attachments to, identity on the part of leaders and the so-called followers. The focus, instead, is on an embodied leadership that encourages an ethical engagement with the community, institutions, organizations, and society.

KW - enlightenment

KW - ethics

KW - humanism

KW - identity

KW - Leadership

U2 - 10.1177/1742715021993641

DO - 10.1177/1742715021993641

M3 - Journal article

AN - SCOPUS:85103381827

VL - 17

SP - 674

EP - 692

JO - Leadership

JF - Leadership

SN - 1742-7150

IS - 6

ER -