Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Leadership development

Electronic data

  • 2020chafferphd

    Final published version, 9.05 MB, PDF document

    Available under license: CC BY-NC-ND: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Leadership development: containment enough

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

Published

Standard

Leadership development: containment enough. / Chaffer, Jo.
Lancaster University, 2020. 264 p.

Research output: ThesisDoctoral Thesis

Harvard

APA

Chaffer, J. (2020). Leadership development: containment enough. [Doctoral Thesis, Lancaster University]. Lancaster University. https://doi.org/10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1177

Vancouver

Chaffer J. Leadership development: containment enough. Lancaster University, 2020. 264 p. doi: 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1177

Author

Chaffer, Jo. / Leadership development : containment enough. Lancaster University, 2020. 264 p.

Bibtex

@phdthesis{86ac0a93ace041baa6088d19b09ebe19,
title = "Leadership development: containment enough",
abstract = "How can we do leadership better, for any place, for whatever we need leadership to do there?In this thesis I propose that the ongoing ability to perceive, reflex on, choose and act to get safe-enough, problematized-enough to make confident-enough decisions on the leadership practice needed is a key practice to practise. This is doing containment. Practising involves paying critical attention to place, practices, power, pace, position, performance, processes, purpose for our people (the Ps). It involves getting comfortable-enough sitting into discomfort. Practise, as explored in the Development section, necessitates seeking guides, resources, models and other {\textquoteleft}stuff{\textquoteright} and making critical agentic choices to purpose this {\textquoteleft}for{\textquoteright} doing development (of self, ofothers). Enough is key to this.I draw on voices from multiple academic fields and also from other philosophical, cultural, practice-based ways of knowing, being and becoming, particularly the work of Nagarjuna. These voices form a notional community of consensus-enough with justification-enough to support the theory-in-use of containment. This is explored in four studies: the first two studies with partner firms in Nepal to substantiate containment-in-practice; the second two studies, in India and the UK, build the theory-in-use to a framework for interventions supporting leadership development. These studies initially followed a Constructivist Grounded Theory Methodology (CGTM) then moved towards a more post-qualitative approach to method.Containment is proposed within constructivist, situated knowledges and a Middle Way approach. As such the researcher{\textquoteright}s voice, position and socio-cultural place and those of the research participants are explored along with their influences on the inquiry, its development and impacts.The thesis concludes with a call for a renaissance in criticality within groups, organisations and the public sphere, activated by leadership as a counter to the too-safe consensus that feels not-safe-enough. Attention to Place and to Practise is the key.Please find individual parts of this thesis uploaded here: https://www.dropbox.com/sh/e8vuro6ayxxxo45/AAA__28kSNwKNgMgw7CVFtsAa?dl=0",
author = "Jo Chaffer",
year = "2020",
doi = "10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1177",
language = "English",
publisher = "Lancaster University",
school = "Lancaster University",

}

RIS

TY - BOOK

T1 - Leadership development

T2 - containment enough

AU - Chaffer, Jo

PY - 2020

Y1 - 2020

N2 - How can we do leadership better, for any place, for whatever we need leadership to do there?In this thesis I propose that the ongoing ability to perceive, reflex on, choose and act to get safe-enough, problematized-enough to make confident-enough decisions on the leadership practice needed is a key practice to practise. This is doing containment. Practising involves paying critical attention to place, practices, power, pace, position, performance, processes, purpose for our people (the Ps). It involves getting comfortable-enough sitting into discomfort. Practise, as explored in the Development section, necessitates seeking guides, resources, models and other ‘stuff’ and making critical agentic choices to purpose this ‘for’ doing development (of self, ofothers). Enough is key to this.I draw on voices from multiple academic fields and also from other philosophical, cultural, practice-based ways of knowing, being and becoming, particularly the work of Nagarjuna. These voices form a notional community of consensus-enough with justification-enough to support the theory-in-use of containment. This is explored in four studies: the first two studies with partner firms in Nepal to substantiate containment-in-practice; the second two studies, in India and the UK, build the theory-in-use to a framework for interventions supporting leadership development. These studies initially followed a Constructivist Grounded Theory Methodology (CGTM) then moved towards a more post-qualitative approach to method.Containment is proposed within constructivist, situated knowledges and a Middle Way approach. As such the researcher’s voice, position and socio-cultural place and those of the research participants are explored along with their influences on the inquiry, its development and impacts.The thesis concludes with a call for a renaissance in criticality within groups, organisations and the public sphere, activated by leadership as a counter to the too-safe consensus that feels not-safe-enough. Attention to Place and to Practise is the key.Please find individual parts of this thesis uploaded here: https://www.dropbox.com/sh/e8vuro6ayxxxo45/AAA__28kSNwKNgMgw7CVFtsAa?dl=0

AB - How can we do leadership better, for any place, for whatever we need leadership to do there?In this thesis I propose that the ongoing ability to perceive, reflex on, choose and act to get safe-enough, problematized-enough to make confident-enough decisions on the leadership practice needed is a key practice to practise. This is doing containment. Practising involves paying critical attention to place, practices, power, pace, position, performance, processes, purpose for our people (the Ps). It involves getting comfortable-enough sitting into discomfort. Practise, as explored in the Development section, necessitates seeking guides, resources, models and other ‘stuff’ and making critical agentic choices to purpose this ‘for’ doing development (of self, ofothers). Enough is key to this.I draw on voices from multiple academic fields and also from other philosophical, cultural, practice-based ways of knowing, being and becoming, particularly the work of Nagarjuna. These voices form a notional community of consensus-enough with justification-enough to support the theory-in-use of containment. This is explored in four studies: the first two studies with partner firms in Nepal to substantiate containment-in-practice; the second two studies, in India and the UK, build the theory-in-use to a framework for interventions supporting leadership development. These studies initially followed a Constructivist Grounded Theory Methodology (CGTM) then moved towards a more post-qualitative approach to method.Containment is proposed within constructivist, situated knowledges and a Middle Way approach. As such the researcher’s voice, position and socio-cultural place and those of the research participants are explored along with their influences on the inquiry, its development and impacts.The thesis concludes with a call for a renaissance in criticality within groups, organisations and the public sphere, activated by leadership as a counter to the too-safe consensus that feels not-safe-enough. Attention to Place and to Practise is the key.Please find individual parts of this thesis uploaded here: https://www.dropbox.com/sh/e8vuro6ayxxxo45/AAA__28kSNwKNgMgw7CVFtsAa?dl=0

U2 - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1177

DO - 10.17635/lancaster/thesis/1177

M3 - Doctoral Thesis

PB - Lancaster University

ER -