Followership Development and Enactment among the Acholi of Uganda: A Seamless Paradigm for Relational Leadership - eBook
Stock No: WW110283EB
Followership Development and Enactment among the Acholi of Uganda: A Seamless Paradigm for Relational Leadership - eBook  -     By: David Wesley Ofumbi

Followership Development and Enactment among the Acholi of Uganda: A Seamless Paradigm for Relational Leadership - eBook

Wipf and Stock / 2019 / ePub

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Stock No: WW110283EB

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Title: Followership Development and Enactment among the Acholi of Uganda: A Seamless Paradigm for Relational Leadership - eBook
By: David Wesley Ofumbi
Format: DRM Free ePub
Vendor: Wipf and Stock
Publication Date: 2019
ISBN: 9781532662232
ISBN-13: 9781532662232
Stock No: WW110283EB

Publisher's Description

The industrial era organizations used dualistic leadership theory, which regarded followers as objects of leaders' influence to socialize them into passive followership irrespective of context and outcome. Consequently, organizations focused on leadership and condemned active followership as a toxic behavior that sabotages organizational processes and outcomes. However, the emergence of relational leadership theory in the information era flattened organizational structure, which created a greater need for collaboration within and across sectors. In this new era, organizations cannot survive without responsible individuals who could be productive as both leaders and followers. As a result, organizations are experiencing high demand for active followership throughout organizational ranks, roles, and relationships. Nonetheless, since followership studies are still in their infancy, there is hardly any information on how followers develop and enact active followership. Whereas some studies established followership identity, role, and behaviors, and identified factors influencing their development, none has explored how they do so. This study offers a theory of followership development and enactment anchored in a seamless paradigm that can be used to expand leadership theory beyond dualistic tendencies that absolutized the differences among leadership variables despite their seamlessness. Therefore, it enhances organizational desire and capacity to develop and engage star followers effectively.

Author Bio

David Wesley Ofumbi is the team leader of Leadership Development Initiative Africa and an adjunct professor of leadership. He is the author of Identity Transformation: A Study of African Christianity in Christian Community Transformation (2012) and other articles.

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