Available Formats
Leadership and Ethics
By (Author) Jacqueline Boaks
Edited by Michael P. Levine
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
24th September 2015
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Social and political philosophy
303.34
Hardback
280
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
572g
Contemporary discussions about the nature of leadership abound. But what constitutes a good leader Are ethics and leadership even compatible Accounts of leadership often lie at either end of an ethical spectrum: on one end are accounts that argue ethics are intrinsically linked to leadership; on the other are (Machiavellian) views that deny any such linkintrinsic or extrinsic. Leadership appears to require a normative component of virtue; otherwise leadership amounts to no more than mere power or influence. But are such accounts coherent and justifiable Approaching a controversial topic, this series of essays tackles key questions from a range of philosophical perspectives, considering the nature of leadership separate from any formal office or role and how it shapes the world we live in.
Just what leadership studies needs: a collection that takes philosophy seriously. The editors rightly recognize that substantive philosophical issues cannot be resolved with data and definitions. The result is a book that takes up the hard questions of leadership. * Terry L. Price, Professor of Leadership Studies and Philosophy, Politics, Economics and Law, Jepson School of Leadership Studies, University of Richmond, USA *
Jacqueline Boaks studied philosophy at The University of Western Australia, Australia. She is completing her PhD in Philosophy looking at leadership in the areas of ethics, political philosophy and business literature. Michael P. Levine is Winthrop Professor of Philosophy at the University of Western Australia, Australia. His publications include: Politics Most Unusual: Violence, Sovereignty and Democracy in the War on Terror (with Damian Cox and Saul Newman 2009), Prospects for an Ethics of Architecture (with Bill Taylor, 2011) and The 'Katrina Effect' (with Bill Taylor, Oenone Rooksby and Joely-Kym Sobott, Bloomsbury 2015).