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The Structure of Moral Leadership

In: Corporate Ethics and Corporate Governance

Author

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  • James MacGregor Burns

    (Williams College)

Abstract

Leadership is a process of morality to the degree that leaders engage with followers on the basis of shared motives and values and goals — on the basis, that is, of the followers’ “true” needs as well as those of leaders: psychological, economic, safety, spiritual, sexual, aesthetic, or physical. Friends, relatives, teachers, officials, politicians, ministers, and others will supply a variety of initiatives, but only the followers themselves can ultimately define their own true needs. And they can do so only when they have been exposed to the competing diagnoses, claims, and values of would-be leaders, only when the followers can make an informed choice among competing “prescriptions”, only when — in the political arena at least — followers have had full opportunity to perceive, comprehend, evaluate, and finally experience alternatives offered by those professing to be their “true” representatives. Ultimately the moral legitimacy of transformational leadership, and to a lesser degree transactional leadership, is grounded in conscious choice among real alternatives. Hence leadership assumes competition and conflict, and brute power denies it.

Suggested Citation

  • James MacGregor Burns, 2007. "The Structure of Moral Leadership," Springer Books, in: Walther Ch Zimmerli & Markus Holzinger & Klaus Richter (ed.), Corporate Ethics and Corporate Governance, pages 87-94, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:sprchp:978-3-540-70818-6_7
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-540-70818-6_7
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    Cited by:

    1. Nass Elmar, 2018. "Why the Microlevel Determines the Future of the Social Market Economy?," Journal for Markets and Ethics, Sciendo, vol. 6(1), pages 107-119, June.

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