Complex Systems Leadership Theory
Complex Systems Leadership Theory
Complex Systems Leadership Theory
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Complex Systems Leadership Theory: New Perspectives from Complexity Science on Social and Organizational Effectiveness A Volume in the Exploring Organizational Complexity Series: Volume 1 Edited by: James K. Hazy, Jeffrey A. Goldstein and Benyamin B. Lichtenstein Library of Congress Control Number: 2007937000 ISBN13: 978-0-9791688-6-4 Copyright 2007 ISCE Publishing, 395 Central Street, Mansfield, MA 02048, USA
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored on a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, microfilming, recording or otherwise, without written permission from the publisher. Printed in the United States of America
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Acknowledgements
Like any complex project, the origins of this book are multi-faceted, and its fruition calls for some important acknowledgements. We begin by thanking Russ Marion and Mary Uhl-Bien for their tireless efforts at integrating complexity science into leadership theory, or more accurately, for applying complexity science in ways that generate a new theory of leadership. Through their inspiration two large-scale conferences emerged, thanks in large part to the two cosponsors: George Washington University and its graduate program in Human and Organizational Learning, and the Center for Creative Leadership in Greensboro, NC. We appreciate the organizational leadership of Margaret Gorman at GW and especially Ellen Van Velsor at CCL for their efforts those events. In both conferences Russ and Mary provided a strong intellectual foundation and an effective social context, through which emerged some powerful ideas and effective partnerships, including the one between the three of us, of which Jim Hazy deserves the most credit for envisioning it at one of the conference events. Another important step in the creation of a Complex Systems Leadership Theory is the production of two special issues on those themes, and we thank the publishers and special editors of those journals: Russ Marion, Mary Uhl-Bien, and Paul Hanges at The Leadership Quarterly; and Kurt Richardson at ISCE Publishing, the publisher of Emergence: Complexity and Organization (E:CO). We also thank the authors who submitted to that special issue; all the papers that were accepted have been reproduced in this volume. Complexity science shows that such collaborations do not come out of the blue, but are linked to ongoing networks and are sparked by more formalized groups. In particular, we appreciate those who founded and organize the Society of Chaos Theory in Psychology and the Life Sciences and its founder Stephen Guastello. We also want to acknowledge those coauthors and colleagues who have had an important and lasting effect on our work including especially Kevin Dooley and Bill McKelvey, among many others. Although weve mentioned him above, we more formally want to acknowledge our publisher, ISCE Publishing; in particular we appreciate Kurt Richardson who has been supportive and helpful in every aspect of this endeavor. From the success of the special issue of E:CO, through the editing and publishing of the final product we could not have asked for better support. Finally thanks to you the reader for taking the insights here and using them to further your work and the work of creating a Complex Systems Leadership Theory.
Contents
1. Complex Systems Leadership Theory:An Introduction.........................1
James K. Hazy, Jeffrey A. Goldstein & Benyamin B. Lichtenstein
8. Paradigmatic Influence and Leadership: The Perspectives of Complexity Theory and Bureaucracy Theory...............................143
Russ Marion & Mary Uhl-Bien
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10. Toward an Understanding of Membership and Leadership in Youth Organizations: Sudden Changes in Average Participation Due to the Behavior of One Individual..................195
Kirstin C. Phelps & Alfred W. Hubler
14. The Role of Leadership: What Management Science Can Give Back to the Study of Complex Systems.................................271
Daniel Solow & Joseph G. Szmerekovsky
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Contents
CHAPTER ONE Complex Systems Leadership Theory An Introduction.......................................................................................................1 Introduction ..............................................................................................................2 Key Terms and Definitions...................................................................................3 The Need for Clear Definitions...........................................................................3 Complex Systems and Complex Adaptive Systems........................................4 Agents, Local Rules of Interaction and Agent-Based Models........................5 Emergence ............................................................................................................6 Toward a Definition of Leadership in Complex Systems................................7 Organization of this Volume................................................................................8 Part I: Foundations for a Complex Systems Leadership Theory....................8 Part II: Learning about Leadership from Computational Models..................9 Part III: What Can Be Said About Real World Problems?...........................11 What We Learned from this Project...............................................................12
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Appendix B: CRA Analysis Sample Outputs................................................32 Sample CRA Network for E:CO......................................................................33 Sample Clusters of Influential Shared Words...............................................34 Interpretation of Themes.................................................................................34
CHAPTER THREE Systems and Leadership: Coevolution or Mutual Evolution Towards Complexity?
Introduction ..........................................................................................................36 Social Systems and Leadership Discourse.....................................................37 Systems Definitions..........................................................................................38 Leadership Definitions......................................................................................38 Period One: Work Systems to Cooperative Systems (1900-1940)......42 Systems Discourse............................................................................................42 Leadership Discourse........................................................................................43 Period Two: Functionally Driven Systems to Interactive Systems (1940-1970)..................................................................................................48 Systems Discourse............................................................................................48 Leadership Discourse........................................................................................50 Period Three: Learning Systems to Complex Systems Theory (1970-2000)..................................................................................................51 Systems Discourse............................................................................................51 Leadership Discourse........................................................................................53 Discussion..............................................................................................................55 Conclusion .............................................................................................................59
CHAPTER FOUR A New Model for Emergence and its Leadership Implications
Emergence, Organizations, and Leadership.................................................62 Applications of Emergence to Organizations..............................................63 Emergence: An Idea Freighted with Heavy Conceptual Baggage..........65 Complexity from Simplicity and Order for Free.....................................66 Moving Beyond Self-Organization..................................................................69 The Self-Transcending Construction of Emergent Order........................72 The Conceptual Background of Self-Transcending Constructions......75 Self-Transcending Constructions and Philosophy Science Issues Prompted by Emergence...............................................................................78 Beyond Bottom-up Descriptions of Emergent Order..................................78 The Ontological Status of Emergent Phenomena.........................................80 The Type of Coherence Characterizing Emergent Phenomena..................81 The Nature of Emergent Levels.......................................................................83
Emergence and Causality..................................................................................85 The Unpredictability of Emergent Phenomena............................................87 Conclusion: The Future of Emergence and Leadership Studies.............89 Appendix One: Formalism for Self-transcending Constructions..........91
CHAPTER SEVEN Complexity Leadership Theory: An Interactive Perspective on Leading in Complex Adaptive Systems
Introduction .......................................................................................................132 Toward a New Era in Leadership: Complexity Leadership Theory.....133
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Specifying the Interactive Nature of Leadership in Events.......................134 Drivers of Adaptive Leadership.....................................................................135 Collective Identity Formation as a Driver of Adaptive Leadership..........135 Tension as a Driver of Adaptive Leadership................................................136 Measuring the Space Between: Methods for Exploring and Analyzing Leadership Events..................................................................136 Conclusions: Implications for Organization Science..............................139
CHAPTER EIGHT Paradigmatic Influence and Leadership: The Perspectives of Complexity Theory and Bureaucracy Theory
Introduction .......................................................................................................144 Leadership Shaped by Traditional Paradigmatic Assumptions...........145 The Assumptions of the Bureaucratic Paradigm........................................145 Traditional Leadership Conceptualizations................................................147 The Complexity Paradigm of Leadership....................................................148 Paradigmatic Assumptions of Complexity Theory....................................148 Complexity Leadership Theory....................................................................150 Summary and Conclusions..............................................................................158
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Leadership of Organizations.........................................................................185
The Charismatic Leadership Process.............................................................185 Routinization of Charisma...........................................................................186 The Functional Demands of Organizational Leadership..............................187
The Future of Mathematical and Computational Modeling of Leadership.....................................................................................................188 Appendix: Detailed Description of the NK Model...................................191
CHAPTER TEN Toward an Understanding of Membership and Leadership in Youth Organizations: Sudden Changes in Average Participation Due to the Behavior of One Individual
Introduction .......................................................................................................196 An Agent-Based Model of a Social Network..............................................197 Average-Quality Youth Groups with No Strong Leaders......................198 Average-Quality Youth Groups with Strong Leaders...............................199 Systems with Slowly Changing Incentives.................................................200 Discussion ...........................................................................................................201 Acknowledgments............................................................................................202 Mathematical Appendix...................................................................................202
CHAPTER ELEVEN The Emergence of Effective Leaders: An Experimental and Computational Approach
Introduction .......................................................................................................206 The Model............................................................................................................207 The Classroom Experiment.............................................................................207 Modeling the Interaction.................................................................................214 Computational Experiments..........................................................................217 Discussion and Further Research..................................................................222 Acknowledgments............................................................................................224 Mathematical Appendix...................................................................................225 Social Optimal Plan.........................................................................................225 Production and Cost Functions Used in the Experiments...........................225
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CHAPTER THIRTEEN Bureaucratic Agents: Simulating Organizational Behavior and Hierarchical Decision-Making
Concepts ..............................................................................................................248 The Micro-Macro Link...................................................................................248 The Tragedy of the Commons.......................................................................249 Max Webers Ideal Bureaucracy....................................................................250 Different Kinds of Power...............................................................................251 A Proposed Typology for Bureaucratic Agents........................................253 Experiments........................................................................................................254 Related Research.............................................................................................254 Experimental Setup........................................................................................256 The Environment............................................................................................256 The Knowledge Base and the Umpire..........................................................257 The Agent........................................................................................................258
Agent Behavior: Reactive Layer....................................................................258 Agent Behavior: Tactical Layer.....................................................................258 Agent Behavior: Strategic Layer...................................................................259 Agent Behavior: Political Level......................................................................260
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Hierarchy ....................................................................................................260 Meritocracy.................................................................................................260 Control through Formal Rules......................................................................261 Impersonality ..............................................................................................261 Voluntary (or Profit-Driven) Employment...................................................261
Meritocratic Petrifaction in Normal State Society.....................................265 Discussion.......................................................................................................266 A Bureaucratic Organization Can Improve Efficiency...............................267 Petrifaction of the Meritocracy: Power Creates Power..............................267 Problems and Advantages of Hierarchies....................................................268 Conclusion: Political Agents?........................................................................269
CHAPTER FOURTEEN The Role of Leadership: What Management Science Can Give Back to the Study of Complex Systems
Introduction .......................................................................................................272 The Impact of Complex Systems Research on Business Research......273 How Business Research Can Influence Complex-Systems Research.274 A Mathematical Framework for Studying Central Control.......................275 Analytical Results From a Specific Form of the General Model...............276 Conclusion ..........................................................................................................279 Mathematical appendix....................................................................................279
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Intrinsic Emergence........................................................................................301
Autogenesis/Autopoiesis ..............................................................................301 Dissipative Structures..................................................................................302 Emergent Evolution......................................................................................303
Conclusion ..........................................................................................................303
Integrative Leadership Propositions............................................................318 Leadership as Dynamically Integrated Influence........................................318 Teams SelfOrganizing to Meet Task Requirements.................................320 Teams Dealing with Complexity..................................................................321 Agents Coevolution.......................................................................................323 Conclusions ........................................................................................................324
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Institutionalizing Innovation........................................................................358 A Case Study of Generative Leadership in an Indian Automotive Manufacturer.................................................................................................361 Regulating Complexity..................................................................................361
Interaction Experience.................................................................................361 Interaction Alignment..................................................................................362 Interaction Speed.........................................................................................362 Interaction Partitioning................................................................................362
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Interaction Leveraging.................................................................................363
CHAPTER TWENTY Towards Social Complexity View on Conflict, Communication, and Leadership
Introduction .......................................................................................................369 Conventional View on Conflict Management...........................................370 Conflict Management Models.........................................................................370 Communication and conflict..........................................................................371 Conventions........................................................................................................372 Purpose ...........................................................................................................372 Control ............................................................................................................372 Style .................................................................................................................373 Outcomes........................................................................................................373 Social Complexity View..................................................................................373 Organizational Communication....................................................................373 Interpretative View on Communication.....................................................375 The Dual Function of Organizational Communication.........................376 Social Complexity, Communication and Conflict....................................379 Conventions Reinterpreted............................................................................380 Control ............................................................................................................380 Styles ...............................................................................................................380 Outcomes........................................................................................................381 Practical Implications.......................................................................................381 Start From Within..........................................................................................381 Look Beyond the Surface................................................................................381 Pay Attention to Communication................................................................382 Influence Indirectly........................................................................................383 Empower Employees......................................................................................383 Conclusion ..........................................................................................................383
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Research Question and Method.....................................................................393 Sampling and Data Collection Strategies....................................................393 Data Analysis Strategies...................................................................................396 Findings................................................................................................................398 Welcoming Cognitive Condition for Self-Organized Pattern Detection: Openness to Surprise..........................................................398 Action Strategy for Self-Organized Pattern Detection: Bracketing Intended Coherence.................................................................................402 Action Strategies for Self-Organized Pattern Detection: Suspending Normative Appraisal and Non-Evaluative Description......................404
Suspending Normative Appraisal.................................................................404 Non-Evaluative Description.........................................................................405 Intervening Condition for Self-Organized Pattern Detection: Entrainment.407
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We meet here in a new light the old truth that in our description of nature the purpose is not to disclose the real essence of the phenomena but only to track down, so far as it is possible, relations between the manifold aspects of our experience. Niels Bohr (1934: 18) Atomic Theory and the Description of Nature.
Introduction
xplaining the real essence of the phenomena that embody leadership has been a subject of intense interest almost from the beginning of recorded history. Indeed, a major theme in many of the earliest surviving epics, myths and folk tales involves a hero learning the lessons of leadership through a retelling of his or her successes and failures. In so doing these stories expose in narrative form the multifarious relations among people that are customarily considered to reflect leadership. More recently, many classic studies in social science and management have continued this tradition by focusing on the dynamics of leadership. Yet from all of this intensive study the essence of the phenomenon of leadership has not been fully revealed, nor has a general set of principles of effective leadership been accepted. In fact, what we even mean by leadership has in large measure remained obscure. This volume offers a new and very different approach to exploring leadership, one based on the new sciences of complexity. What we are calling Complex Systems Leadership Theory posits that leadership can be enacted through any interaction in an organization. Far from being the sole province of managers and executives, we contend leadership is an emergent phenomenon within complex systems. As such, exploring the meaning and implications of emergent is one of the major issues taken up by the chapters in this book. Through advances in computational modeling and non-linear dynamics, the interactions which generate leadership can be tracked in a much more rigorous way, enabling managers to better understand and encourage those dynamics of interaction which prove to have beneficial effects on the organization. Overall, we see a Complex Systems Leadership Theory as the core of a new era in leadership studies; introducing and furthering this new era are the primary goals of the present volume. This edited volume has arisen out of a growing sense among us, the editors, as well as among our colleagues especially Russ Marion, Mary Uhl-Bien and Bill McKelvey (Marion & Uhl-Bien, in press; Marion & Uhl-Bien, 2007; Uhl-Bien, Marion & McKelvey, in press), that the field of leadership is in an ideal position to benefit from the insights and methods that complexity science has provided to other academic fields. It is important to note, however, that this volume is significantly different from many other accounts of complexity applied to organizations. Much of the latter have tended to be figurative and loosely conceived, often veering into mere platitudes. In contrast, each of the closely reviewed research papers in this volume employs carefully thought-out approaches based on a deep understanding of the science underlying complexity and complex adaptive systems; each author utilizes this understanding to reveal
new insights about leadership. As editors we have selected scholars who bring an accurate and nuanced understanding of complexity science to the study of leadership and management, and we have encouraged (and in some cases enforced) the use of well specified definitions and hypotheses as well as sound scientific modeling for each study in this volume. The first stage of this effort was a Special Issue, Complexity and Leadership, in the journal Emergence: Complexity and Organization (Issue 8.4, 2006), edited by Jeffrey Goldstein and James K. Hazy. This special issue contained seven papers along with an introduction and a reprinted classical paper as is the custom of E:CO. These articles specifically addressed the application of complexity theory to leadership from the perspective of qualitative and quantitative research methods as applied within a reframed conceptual model of the leadership issues being considered. Due to the success of this Special Issue of E:CO, we put out an additional call for papers and invited a small number of well-known researchers to contribute their perspectives to the collection, the result being a much expanded volume that includes the initial papers of the Special Issue as well as fourteen new chapters. The present volume thus represents a much more complete picture of the present state of the emerging paradigm that we are calling complex systems leadership theory. The contributors to this edited book hail from diverse and interdisciplinary fields including: mathematics, physics, computer science, law, education, philosophy, psychology, sociology, communications, and leadership studies. The wide range of the disciplines involved follows what is now a hallmark of complexity-based research. We are heartened that this interdisciplinary trend continues into applications of complexity to leadership studies.
ne of the recalcitrant stumbling blocks in leadership research has been a lingering vagueness around the definition of leadership itself, a problem reflected in the following comment by the well-known management scholar James March: I doubt that leadership is a useful concept for serious scholarship (March & Contu, 2006: 85). Like other social scientists, March was echoing the belief that leadership as a construct is simply too ill-defined to form the basis for any kind of rigorous scientific inquiry. In contrast, the present book attests to how leadership can in fact be studied rigorously and cogently using new constructs and methods coming out of the sciences of complex systems, through which the processes and outcomes of leadership can be more closely defined and explained. Advances over the last half century have brought new techniques, new modeling strategies, and new constructs for rethinking how human systems evolve and the role of leadership in these evolving systems. As stated above, most of the previous supposedly complex systems approaches to leadership have not engendered a sense that there was more to using complexity than applying general metaphors that were not necessarily rooted in the mathematics or science of dynamical systems theory. Thus, one often heard about the unpredictability of complex systems and how leaders had to
Hazy, Goldstein & Lichtenstein
accordingly be aware of and utilize this growing recognition. The lasting message, though, often devolved into: Unfortunately, there is really nothing you can do about it. Due to an inability to operationalize complexity metaphors in practical settings, the whole use of complexity often degenerated into nothing more than a short-lived fad (McKelvey, 1999). In addition, many popular accounts relied on an understanding of complexity as the science of bottom-up emergence order out of chaos if you will, the popular meaning of self-organization. The moral was: simply put together the right conditions and the hoped for result for will bubble up or emerge on their own, spontaneously and fully-formed as new processes and strategies that dramatically increase the competitive advantage of the firm...! As many managers and scholars soon learned, it doesnt happen that way. Emergence in real organizations requires constant attention, support and resources, and the success of emergence like successful leadership depends in large measure on the quality of resources and attention that individuals and managers bring to the process. One of the ways that the present volume aims to improve on these previous approaches is to provide clear and precise definitions. This is particularly important to do right at the outset since the chapters in this volume represent state-of-the-art research and thinking which may be unfamiliar to some readers. An important prerequisite to the systematic and scientific pursuit of complex systems leadership theory is the use of precisely defined technical terms which we will try to supply without becoming heavy handed in the process. At the same time it was infeasible to maintain complete precision across all chapters; accordingly, there are some differences in usage that the discerning reader will uncover. With this caveat in mind, we define the following terms in the next few pages: complex systems, complex adaptive systems, agents, local rules of interaction, and emergence. This discussion will culminate in a preliminary definition for leadership in complex systems.
vironment, and it also includes newly specified mechanisms that describe how such adaptation can occur. Mainly through research into cellular automata, artificial life, and multi-agent simulation models, the Santa Fe Institute brand of complex adaptive systems focuses on the emergence of new capabilities or functionalities that arise out of the interaction of semi-autonomous agents. However, there are other trends in the study of complex systems that rely less on computational simulations and more on the study of complex phenomena as such self-organization in physical or biological systems (Haken, 1987; Nicolis & Prigogine, 1989). In these studies the systems under analysis are usually simply referred to as complex systems rather than as complex adaptive systems, even though they may exhibit adaptive characteristics mostly through random variations, recombinatory operations, evolutionary selection, and feedback mechanisms. Non-computational complexity studies thus focus on social systems which are complex in this formal sense. Thus, we propose that complex systems be used in the general case, and that the term complex adaptive systems be reserved for studies of systems composed of semi-autonomous agents that recombine into new capabilities as a mechanism of adaptation.
Emergence
Emergence refers to the coming-into-being of novel, higher level structures, patterns, processes, properties, dynamics, and laws, and how this more complex order arises out of the interactions among components (agents) that make up the system itself (Goldstein, 1999). Although sometimes incorrectly invoked as a kind of magical sundering of causality, emergence is actually an outcome of variegated and constructed dynamics generated out of interactions between the lower level agents that constitute the system. A key insight of complex systems is that once a novel higher level system has emerged, its presence and behavior becomes a salient layer for the exploration of explanatory relationships, perhaps even more so than the level of the components by themselves (Anderson, 1972). Thus, the focus of inquiry in complexity is what emerges out of lower level interaction, and how the laws among these emergent properties, patterns, structures, and entities differ from that of the lower level dynamics. What is unique in human systems and what offers the opportunity for unique insights within the complexity field broadly is that human beings as individuals are at the nexus of emergences at the social level. Emergent properties and patterns must be recognized, navigated and in some way encouraged by individuals if they are to take advantage of coordinated action. Leadership of course is caught up in this nexus, and the unique position we occupy as individuals within social, cultural and economic systems provides a level of visibility into the relations between the manifold aspects of our experience. Thus, we see an opportunity in this research not just for better understand leadership through a better understanding of emergence, but also to better understand emergence through a better understanding of leadership. The whole notion of emergence with its emphasis on the coming into being of the genuinely novel departs the Aristotelian denigration of novelty as a mere aberration away from an ideal type. In management studies, this Aristotelian disparagement of novelty has been embedded in the emphasis on keeping an equilibrium and maintaining control. In contrast a complexity view of leadership recognizes novelty as the growing edge of healthy adaptive systems, and provides a consistent framework for tracking and understanding how and why novel order emerges in complex systems, including novelty in the dynamics of leadership and organizations. Emergent order in organizations can also be understood as the result of opposing currents. On the one hand, emergence cannot be controlled in a traditional sense; the notion of self-organization is usually invoked within this pole of emergence. Several of the papers in this volume explore the relation between emergence and self-organization. At the same time, and despite the way self-organization has been proclaimed in the popular press, careful complexity research reveals that emergence does not simply happen by itself it involves tending and encouragement from its component agents as well as from a higher level.
n summary we contend that a new theory of leadership is needed which incorporates the principles of complexity while matching common experience approaches that are theoretically sound and empirically supported. In our attempt to organize this collection of responses to that call, we have separated this edited volume into three sections. Part I develops fundamental conceptual revisions to the construct of leadership that are prompted by key ideas from complexity science such as emergence, emergent leadership, and mutual evolution. Part II then grounds these and other insights through mathematical and computational modeling of leadership dynamics and behavior. Finally, Part III describes various models, metaphors and methods arising in the application of complexity theory to leadership. Each of these sections is described further below.
lytic methods that help uncover how certain interactions are leadership while others are not. Interactive though leadership is, there are formal managers in all organizations, which leads to another key issue brought to the fore in Part I: What can formal leaders do to support the emergence of order in organizations? It turns out that there is plenty to do. By understanding some of the underlying mechanisms that give rise to emergent phenomena, supervisors and managers can marshal the resources and energy needed to enact emergent structures. Furthermore, managing in a 21st Century organization means more than simply encouraging emergence there are roles and tasks a manager should perform which remain bureaucratic and functional to the core; distinguishing between these and those requires a great deal of skill and aptitude. Together these concepts lead to a different way of seeing a new lens that highlights the dynamical and ever-changing process of leading. This lens borrows from systems theory, from leadership theory, and from complexity science. Several chapters in Part 1 detail the elements of this new lens, comparing it especially to traditional models. Moreover as we said above, ours is one volume of four being published within a 2-year period, composing more than 25 distinct articles in all. The core ideas of all of these studies have been content analyzed by Jennings and Dooley (this volume), using a centering resonance analysis (CRA) software technology. Essentially they collected all 35 articles and ran them through a CRA analysis, to identify the central ideas in each essay and build a network of nodes that represents the most important ideas linking all the essays. Their chapter summarizes these ideas in a clear and concise way thus providing an unprecedented overview to this nascent field of Complex Systems Leadership Theory. In all, Part I lays the conceptual groundwork for the kinds of scientific hypothesis testing taken-up in Part II.
Perhaps the most primitive dynamic in human interactions is the first mover advantage in the leader-follower relationship. When two agents are each confronted with a situation, the one who acts first can make it more difficult for his competitor to be successful in the dynamic environment that now includes the enactments of the first mover. The leadership question is: how and when do human interactions in this situation result in changes to the expectations with respect to interaction among agents, i.e., when does leadership imply a shift in future action in a direction other than what was advocated by the first mover? A related leadership quandary occurs when individual agents either choose to join a group that is already pursuing a common objective or not. How and when are these joiners accepted into that group? For example, one model described in this section found that agents who were each acting in their own self-interest could under the right circumstances collectively shift toward a correlated set of actions pursuing a common purpose. Further, this shift occurred in a manner characterized by punctuated change that can be modeled dynamically according to a bifurcation point. These ideas can be summarized in the following proposition: Leadership is observed in a complex system when agent actions or communications lead two or more agents to participate in (or join) a leader/follower dyad or a led-group within the system. In addition to the attractiveness of a common purpose, agents are also influenced by social pressure to conform that influences each agents decision to join a group or not. Models described in this book show that gathering and maintaining follower-agents requires agents to enact leadership actions that establish a bias for joining. According to this framework, leadership is observed when at least one other agent chooses to participate in a program rather than to continue to follow an alternative, even though rational analysis might suggest that the alternative would be to his or her benefit. Thus far the aspects we have focused on have been bottom up in nature which follows a well-established complexity framework for organizations as being informed by interactions among agents within networks of heterarchical ties. This represents a corrective to the traditional top-down, command and control view of leadership. But the real world works in terms of both heterarchy and hierarchy. This is not just a concession to reality: it turns out that hierarchy and the centralized control it establishes may play a crucial role in limiting the potential for complexity catastrophea situation where the number and diversity of interactions overwhelms the ability of individuals to cope with them in a well functioning organization. These ideas are also explored in this volume leading to another proposition of leadership in complex systems: One aspect of effective leadership is establishing structure and control in ways that limit the potential for complexity catastrophe, while also enabling requisite complexity within the system as the environment changes. Taken together, the chapters in Part II aim at developing models with specific and precise definitions for leadership and agent action, while making up for a lack of computational modeling in the field of leadership (Hazy, et al., this volume). One additional benefit of these models is the high degree of precision
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they bring to operationalizations of leadership. Although a reader can agree or disagree with the approach, there is no denying that the models are clearly defined and delimited. Models such as these can serve to identify leaders out of the patterns observed in the interactions of agents, the dynamics of common strategies adopted by the agents brought about by social influence of the agents on each other (peer pressure), and which skills on the part of leader agents are needed to bring about a common strategy.
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Turner, work in a number of fields is converging toward the rehabilitation of imagination as a fundamental scientific topic, since it is the fundamental engine of meaning behind the most ordinary mental events (p. 15). The title of Part III also includes the term methods. Although this book is not about methods per se in the specific sense of technique, we are not silent about this crucial component of a Complex Systems Leadership Theory. In one sense, all of Part II is about methods since mathematical and computational modeling involve methods that are unique and perhaps less understood than the analytic methods traditional used by leadership scholars. However, these methods are well established in the fields of complexity science. Likewise, the concepts described in this book present additional methodological challenges if they are to form the foundation of a new science of leadership in human systems. The methodological challenges that derive from non-linearity and mutual causality are not to be underestimated, and so we offer in this last section some examples and methodological suggestions for the reader to ponder. The models, metaphors and methods in this section reflect a range of approaches authors have taken to grapple with the perplexing questions that a complex systems perspective forces leadership scholars to confront. Questions like: How do human interactions lead to new ideas and innovations? What are the dynamics among individual autonomous agents that lead to the perception that leadership has happened? Can these dynamics be observed? Can their outcome be predicted? How do individual agents recognize and adapt to the presence of these dynamics? If recognized, can agents realistically intervene in these dynamics to turn them to their advantage? What about turning them toward the systems advantage? These deep questions are certainly not completely answered here, but these questions and others like them and the gradual uncovering of relations that begin to answer them, are likely to form the agenda for leadership research over the coming years. That agenda will likely begin with metaphors and models, and end with empirically supported theory and computational models with capacities to predict outcomes with reasonable accuracy. This book reports the progress of scientific advance along these new fronts at present, but again what we are able to report today is just the beginning.
s we began this project, we found that many of the articles that were submitted and that we reviewed assumed the traditional viewpoint in which leadership rests in a particular person or small group of persons who exercise authority and control. Leadership was thus implicitly defined as directed outward from the leader or leaders with the intent to control or influence others toward the leaders ends. These papers then brought up complexity science as an alternative viewpoint for gaining insight into that situation and better frame the challenges that leaders face in their decision processes. But the problems being considered were the same old ones and the papers assumed the same old traditional command and control posture but dressed up in new garments.
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At the same time, we also noticed papers demonstrating the evolution of something else entirely: complex systems view of leadership could grapple with an entirely different set of problems. In this stream, the questions of interest related to the dynamics of the system and not a superior acting on a subordinate. These new questions like the following began sparking our interest: How does leadership emerge from within the dynamics of a system? To what extent and by what mechanisms does individual agency influence system dynamics? Does collective agency emerge? If so, how does this come about? Was leadership a function of one individual exercising power over another or was more about a dynamic that emerged across groups of people in interaction? What we were seeing therefore were explorations of leadership as a systemic event rather than as a personal attribute. As editors, we found this development quite promising for the field. We elected to follow this thread, to explore its implications more fully, and in the end to collect selected contributions that followed this new way. In other words, for this book we consider leadership to be an intrinsic property emerging out of complex systems of human interaction. Leadership is embedded in those interactions and serves a system level purpose even as it furthers the purposes of those individuals who participate in its function. What that purpose is and how leadership relates to individual agents within the system, to groups of agents, and to the system as a whole are the subjects explored in this book. Taken together, we believe these contributions constitute a new theoretical foundation and research program for an emerging scientific theory of leadership in complex systems, one that offers great promise to inform both empirical research and the day to day practice of leadership.
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Index
Actors 26, 39, 43, 53, 55, 129, 135, 139-40, 248, 314, 355, 391 Adaptability 4, 31, 83, 90-1, 94, 122, 133, 139, 143-4, 148, 150-1, 153-7, 229, 243, 299 Adaptation 5, 21-2, 24, 27, 34, 51, 81, 90, 111-2, 115, 124, 175, 187-8, 232-3, 243-4, 350 organizational 228, 237, 291, 308-9, 350 Adaptive change 24, 136, 141, 231-2, 295, 298, 312 leaders 233, 235, 239, 242-4, 312 leadership 129, 134-6, 139, 143, 149, 151-3, 155-6, 158, 232-3, 237, 242-3, 311-2 tensions 63, 102, 105-6, 112, 125, 152, 155, 307-8, 311, 315, 318, 320, 322 Agent behavior 101-2, 258-60, 300 interactions 5, 7, 11, 27, 57, 99, 135-6, 175-6, 264-5, 273, 294-5, 298, 317, 321 Agent-based modeling 34, 102, 138, 169-70, 177, 184, 254, 293, 295, 298, 300 models 5, 89, 170-2, 175, 181, 197, 205 Agents, contribution of 192 Assumptions 18-9, 36, 59, 80, 110, 114, 119, 132-3, 144-5, 148, 176, 178, 292-3, 372-3, 381, 384 Attraction, basins of 290, 322-4 Attractors 64, 77, 82, 86-8, 167, 290, 314, 317, 319-20 Authority 19, 38, 49, 111, 113, 115, 123, 134, 144-7, 156, 247, 250-1, 275, 316, 318, 332 Automata, cellular 5, 77, 97, 288, 291, 293-4, 298 Autonomy 55, 118, 154-5, 305, 307, 316, 323 Autopoiesis 291, 293, 301-2
Behaviors 5-8, 44-5, 48-52, 100-2, 115, 119-20, 138-40, 145-7, 152-4, 169-70, 205-9, 213-7, 272-3, 390-3, 402-5, 407-11 human 119-20, 314, 382, 390 self-organized 105, 392, 404-5, 407, 410-1 Biases 25, 34, 67-8, 302, 304, 395 Bureaucracy 27, 95, 145-7, 150, 152, 155, 158, 171, 178, 190, 247, 250-3, 255-8, 260-6, 268, 338
Index
465
ideal 171, 178, 250, 252, 267 Bureaucratic agents 30, 247, 249, 251, 253-7, 259, 261-5, 267, 269 model 145, 255 organizations 21, 189, 230, 251-2, 254, 256, 259, 261, 263, 267, 270 paradigm 144-5, 149, 151, 154, 156, 158 principles 145-6, 250, 257, 260 Business cycles 197-8, 202 organizations 22, 27, 165, 271-4, 276, 279, 328, 330
Capacity 4, 12, 37, 45, 77-8, 94, 118-9, 152-3, 159, 163, 294-5, 297, 299, 402-3, 407, 409-11 Catastrophe theory 288, 293-4, 296 Causality 6, 66, 85-7, 135 Cause-effect relationships 58, 111, 113-5 Centering resonance analysis 9, 17-8, 20, 29, 327 Central control 166, 183, 190, 272-3, 275, 278-9 CEO 94, 115-6, 124, 184, 190, 275-6, 395 Chaos 31, 64, 66, 85, 97-8, 174, 195, 339 Coevolution 30, 59, 228-9, 232-5, 237, 242, 244, 314, 323 Collective action 29, 132, 136, 139, 183, 208, 232-3, 237, 244, 320 Communication 3, 7, 10, 20, 29, 48, 52, 58, 111, 228, 235, 312, 318-9, 356, 362, 367-84 human 372, 374-6, 378 Communicative acts 310, 312, 314, 317, 321-2 Community 196, 344-5, 355, 374-5, 384, 388, 395, 397 Complex adaptive systems 2, 4, 5, 9, 21-4, 27, 31, 35-6, 40-1, 99, 106, 151-2, 235-6, 288-9, 305-6, 313, 352 environments 29, 37, 105, 132, 150, 174, 256, 305, 307, 310, 321-2, 353 leadership 297, 389, 409-10 organizational systems 190, 351, 390, 393 organizations 22, 30, 93-5, 97, 111, 130, 143, 149, 154, 159, 305, 307, 309, 311, 313, 411 systems 1-7, 10-1, 13, 69-71, 83-5, 109-13, 126-7, 149-50, 165, 167-8, 189-91, 271-5, 279, 289-90, 349-50, 389-93 Complexity 2-4, 17-24, 26-8, 30-2, 34-6, 48-52, 54-62, 132-6, 156-8, 285, 287-9, 303-5, 320-4, 333-42, 355-8, 409-11 catastrophe 10, 169, 180-1, 190, 355, 357 leadership 20, 27, 58, 94, 130, 134, 136, 139, 143-5, 150, 152, 154, 156-9, 244, 303-4, 309-11 research 4, 6, 79, 97, 105, 285, 287-9, 304, 390, 411 science 2, 3, 8, 9, 11-2, 18-9, 22, 30, 35-7, 52-3, 55, 61-2, 93-5, 106, 126-7, 132-3, 144, 306
466
theory 22-3, 27, 29, 59, 64, 75, 80, 82, 85, 113, 148, 156-8, 206, 232, 309, 389 Computational capacity 80, 328-9 emergence 64, 77, 81, 87-8 experiments 95, 97, 99, 103, 217-8, 299 models 9, 12, 29, 77, 95-6, 103, 138, 166, 190, 223, 228, 299, 328, 332, 352 Computer simulations 164, 168, 180-1, 183, 188, 223-4, 255, 271, 291, 325 Conditions, antecedent 72, 77, 86 Conflict management 367-70, 372, 376-7, 379-84 organizational 367, 369-70, 379, 384 research 370-3 Conflicts 26, 29, 45, 53, 112, 123, 125, 144, 146-8, 248, 323, 342, 344, 367-73, 379-84, 399 Conformity 82-3 Connectivity 83, 357, 362, 364-5 Constraints 8, 71, 89, 90, 102, 133, 140, 148, 150, 154-6, 252, 291, 313, 346, 358-9, 387, 392-3 Constructional operations 70-4, 77, 79, 80 Context 21-3, 35-6, 43, 151-2, 175, 177-8, 187-8, 300-3, 309-11, 318-9, 323-5, 346, 351, 353, 355-6, 358-9 Control 21-2, 38-9, 42-3, 47-9, 52-3, 57-8, 110-2, 117-8, 144-5, 151-6, 173-4, 229-32, 272-3, 275-81, 316, 380-2 centralized 10, 182, 305, 307, 316 Cooperation 28, 44, 46-7, 125, 170, 174, 179, 250, 256, 263, 274, 313-4, 317-20 Creativity 26-7, 83, 112, 125, 141, 144, 148, 151-5, 332, 349, 351, 382, 387, 389, 391-2, 409 Cybernetics 30, 39, 48-9, 52, 287-8
Decisions 5, 109, 118, 123, 145, 147, 153, 156, 169-71, 177, 184-5, 212, 229, 273-5, 315-6, 331 Definitions of leadership 18, 38, 47, 134, 189 Deterministic chaos theory 288, 293-5 Development 11, 26, 36-7, 58-9, 75-6, 95-6, 103-4, 117, 195, 231, 265, 273-4, 303, 324-5, 374, 377-8 Dialogue 37, 367, 379, 410-1 Dichotomies 334, 402 Disorder 52, 67, 112, 338-41, 344-5, 378, 380 Dissipative structure model 63, 68-9, 79, 87, 377-8
Index
467
structures 23, 62-4, 69, 72, 74-5, 79, 81, 87-8, 288, 291, 293-4, 301-3 Diversity 10, 27, 59, 82-3, 141, 148, 150-1, 188, 202, 287, 310, 343, 351, 377-9, 382 Dynamic network analysis 5, 131, 139, 172, 227-8, 230, 235 systems 288-90, 296 Dynamical search 307-9, 315, 318, 322-4 Dynamics 4, 6, 7, 11-3, 38, 49, 78-9, 96-7, 136-8, 173-6, 185-7, 202-3, 294-7, 304-5, 310-1, 320-1, 323-4 complex 25, 149, 151, 153, 157, 184
Effective leaders 190, 205-7, 209, 211, 213, 215, 217, 219, 221, 223, 225 Efficacious adaptation 308, 311, 313, 318, 321, 324 Efficiency 21-2, 39, 42-3, 57, 104, 125, 144, 152, 158, 187, 227, 229-31, 243, 247, 263, 361-2 Emergence 4-9, 21, 23-32, 61-81, 83-91, 93-107, 109-11, 118-9, 121-7, 139, 285, 287-9, 292-6, 298-9, 301-3, 310-2 intrinsic 285, 292-3, 301 levels of 27, 97, 106, 285, 288, 293 model of 61, 63, 68-70, 73, 78-80, 90-1 of order 9, 80, 89, 90, 302 Emergent 23-4, 30-1, 34, 52, 76-7, 80-1, 85-6, 105-6, 149, 156-8, 232-3, 236-7, 242-4, 307-9, 318-9, 323-4 behavior 94-5, 100, 109-11, 115, 118, 300 dynamics 17, 23-4, 26, 144, 151, 158, 285, 293, 410 evolution 291, 295, 301, 303 groups 93, 98, 100, 102, 104 leaders 102, 308, 317, 319, 321, 323 leadership 8, 30, 64-5, 130, 175, 298, 302, 305, 313-4, 317, 319-21 levels 66, 78-9, 83-4, 242 networks 64-5, 82, 93, 104 order 6, 8, 27, 37, 62-3, 66-70, 72-4, 76, 78-9, 81, 89, 94, 100, 127, 290, 295 phenomena 2, 9, 21-3, 34, 64, 66, 72, 74, 76-83, 86-8, 95, 105, 113, 134, 265 processes 88, 113, 289, 295, 311 properties 6, 41, 86, 99, 104, 369 structures 9, 49, 59, 63, 68, 72, 78, 81, 83, 86, 88, 91, 95, 99, 139, 185 Employees 8, 126, 156, 251, 257, 297, 345, 370, 383-4, 389, 391-2, 403-4 Enabling leadership 28, 143, 149, 152-3, 232-4, 312 Enslavement 71, 82, 294 Environment 40-1, 48, 51, 57-8, 90, 150, 173-4, 187-8, 261-2, 269-70, 307, 310-2, 320-2, 354-6, 359, 378-9 changing 4, 28, 172, 187, 237, 308, 311, 313, 315, 322, 350
468
Equilibrium 6, 22, 43, 48-51, 59, 112, 123, 222, 267, 312, 352 Evolution 13, 31, 35-7, 48, 53, 57-9, 66, 77, 86-7, 93, 158, 197, 228, 291, 336-7, 355-6 Experiments 35, 88, 206-9, 211-3, 215, 218-25, 254, 256, 266, 270, 302, 306, 347, 357, 398
Fair leaders 177, 216, 218-23 Feedback 23, 48, 52-3, 58, 64, 74, 112-3, 255, 289, 296, 351, 353, 359-60, 362 Fitness 7, 154, 291, 307, 328-31, 384 Fluctuations, random 87, 89, 90, 197, 202 Folklore 61, 65-7, 69, 70, 85, 94 Formal leaders 9, 95, 135-6, 139, 141, 176, 206, 229, 233-4, 237, 243, 308, 310-3, 317, 319-21, 323-4 Free choice 43, 47-8, 52, 55, 313 Functions 11, 13, 37, 47, 50, 59, 65, 73, 125-6, 146-7, 150-1, 158-9, 197, 256-7, 272-3, 320-2
Generative leaders 106, 349, 353, 355-9, 364 leadership 32, 34, 312, 349-61, 363-5 Genetic algorithms 5, 87, 98, 100, 172, 255, 291, 294, 298-300, 352 Goals 38-9, 43, 45, 47-50, 90, 120, 147-9, 151-2, 168-9, 252-4, 259-60, 262, 289, 292, 329-32, 357 Group dynamics 50, 82, 146, 302, 310, 370 norms 95-6, 100, 104, 300, 323 Groups 10, 36, 38-9, 44-7, 50, 53-5, 64, 99-104, 111-3, 176, 178-83, 201-2, 207-16, 300-1, 319-22, 341-2 Growth 27, 103, 124-5, 158, 182, 185, 197, 201-2, 328, 354, 369
Heterogeneity 106, 141, 144, 147-8, 151-2, 155-6, 175, 251, 314-5, 322 Heterogeneous agents 94-5, 97, 104, 133-4, 175-6, 216, 313, 325 Hierarchical levels 104-5, 147, 257, 260, 310, 316 structures 43, 185, 190, 230, 267-8, 315 Hierarchy 10, 64, 84, 95-7, 104-5, 151, 177-8, 184-5, 247, 250-2, 257, 260, 262-3, 267-9, 319, 362 Homogeneity 67, 82-3, 154
Index
469
Human interactions 9, 10, 12-3, 36-7, 42, 57, 59, 310 systems 3, 6, 11-2, 59, 176, 313-4, 322, 334, 337-41, 344, 373, 394, 409
Incentives 19, 171, 184, 195, 197-204, 208, 249, 268, 275 Individual agents 5, 10, 12-3, 99, 138, 140, 168, 174-5, 178, 190-1, 239, 250-2, 271-3, 307, 309-10, 329 Individuals 4-8, 43-6, 112, 115-6, 132-5, 139-41, 146, 149, 151-3, 165-6, 172-4, 206-8, 248-9, 307-8, 355-6, 390-2 Informal network 153, 229, 232-3, 235, 237, 239, 242-3, 310 Information 39, 40, 48-9, 121-4, 136, 152, 184, 187-8, 242, 256-7, 307-8, 315-6, 321-3, 357-9, 374-6, 381-2, 411 flows 48, 52, 55, 57-8, 152, 184, 187, 229, 234, 242-3, 311, 353, 358, 362, 381 Innovation 12, 21, 24, 94-5, 99, 112-3, 136, 139-41, 154-8, 302-3, 345-6, 349-58, 360-1, 364-5, 387, 391-3 institutionalizing 349, 358, 360, 363-5 projects 97, 272, 356-7, 359-60 Integrative leadership 305, 313, 315, 318-9, 324 Intelligence, collective 231-2, 237, 390 Interaction dynamics 2, 94, 174, 205, 208, 320, 351 Interactions 4-10, 36-8, 57-9, 83-5, 94-5, 133-7, 139-41, 213-5, 231-3, 242-4, 248, 295-8, 307-18, 323-4, 349-58, 361-5 complex 29, 74, 132, 141, 235 nonlinear 24, 112, 165, 214, 292 Interactive dynamics 23-4, 134, 136, 148, 151, 154-5, 157, 391 Interdependence 39, 99, 138, 153, 163, 168-9, 180, 184, 190, 299, 303, 321, 345, 355, 369-70, 384 Interdependencies 99, 137, 139, 150, 152, 154, 156, 165, 167-8, 189-90, 192, 232, 242-4, 308, 314
K L
Knowledge 51-2, 58-9, 101, 111-3, 120-2, 133-4, 148, 188, 232-3, 235-6, 239, 242, 300-1, 315, 319-20, 322 flows 232-3, 242-4
Language 37-8, 48, 52, 57-8, 60, 71, 101, 126, 317, 322-3, 356, 376, 379, 404-5, 411 Leaders administrative 149, 154-9 organizational 90, 147, 231, 363, 387, 393
470
Leadership definition of 3, 7, 23, 317, 330, 332 activities 95, 187-8, 289 administrative 143, 149, 151-3, 156 behaviors 51, 57, 141, 146, 218 directive 24, 229, 240, 242 discourse 37, 43-6, 50-1, 53, 55, 57-8 distributed 55, 133-4, 155, 309 effective 2, 7, 10, 54, 132, 185, 325, 353 emergence 31, 34, 96, 111, 190, 223 formal 65, 104, 230, 313-4, 317, 319-20, 322 managerial 106, 149, 153, 232, 311-2, 330 mechanisms 28, 307-9, 312 model 31, 172, 184, 305, 307, 311, 373 nature of 36, 58, 113, 129, 229 participative 25, 229, 234, 240, 242-3 processes 11, 24-5, 118-9, 151, 171, 178, 187-8, 232, 300, 307, 314 research 3, 12, 17, 19, 21, 23, 25-7, 29, 31, 33, 140-1, 158, 163, 165, 172-3, 295-6 roles 3, 31-2, 34, 38, 57, 64-5, 75, 103, 115, 132, 195, 201, 217, 273-5, 279, 310 skills 197, 199, 202 studies 2, 3, 61-2, 73, 89, 133, 334, 341, 345 style 32, 34, 106, 216-7, 223, 227, 229, 231-5, 237-9, 241-5, 255, 270 participative 176, 237, 240, 242 theory 9, 19, 29, 35-6, 51, 95, 129, 133-4, 158, 174, 206, 227, 243, 289, 305, 324 conventional 17-9, 27-8 Learning 9, 21-2, 52, 114-5, 122-5, 127, 139-40, 144, 150-1, 153-5, 171, 182, 229, 231-3, 242-4, 321 Levels 5, 6, 39, 78-9, 83-5, 94-7, 99-107, 178, 180, 185-6, 201-2, 242-4, 253, 258-60, 292-7, 299-302, 308-9 of analysis 36-7, 163, 175, 294, 324 Lower levels 27, 70, 72, 77-8, 83-4, 86, 113, 125, 147, 243, 251, 258, 265, 352, 362
Macro-level events 248 Management 1-3, 17-8, 22, 27-8, 93-4, 117-8, 129-30, 143-4, 146, 148-9, 152-3, 158-9, 163, 271, 285, 340 supply chain 17, 182, 271, 273, 327 Managers 1, 2, 4, 8, 9, 26-7, 54, 93-4, 104-5, 111-2, 117-8, 123-6, 150, 331-2, 361, 371-2, 381-3, 401-2 Mathematical and Computational Modeling of Leadership 164, 166, 168, 170, 172, 174, 176, 178, 180, 182, 184, 186, 188, 190, 192, 196
Index
471
Membership 31, 34, 195-7, 199, 201, 203 Meritocracy 145, 171, 178, 247, 251-2, 260, 262-3, 265-8 Meritocratic mechanisms 247, 251-2, 259-63, 265-8 Metaphors 3, 8, 11-2, 119, 126, 332 Models 10-2, 63-6, 74-8, 99-102, 171-87, 189-90, 197-8, 202-4, 206-8, 213-4, 275-7, 292-3, 300-2, 313-4, 324-5, 370-2 Motivation 51, 55, 58, 119-20, 125, 155, 208-9, 211-2, 215, 320, 390 Multi-agent systems 247, 249-50, 267, 269-70
Network organizations 237 Networks 8-10, 20, 34, 67-8, 123-4, 139-40, 148, 150, 154, 169, 177-8, 198, 202, 224, 236-7, 298-9 NK model 99, 140, 167-9, 171, 179-80, 184, 190-3, 235, 274, 299 NK Model 138, 167, 171, 191, 193 Nodes 9, 74, 124, 140, 169, 235, 244 Norms 19, 23, 27, 38, 43, 48, 154, 253, 255, 307, 317, 322-3, 400 Novel order 6, 23, 61-2, 67, 72, 74, 88
Order creation 4, 72, 97, 307, 311 Organization science 1, 93, 129, 139, 175, 206, 227, 288, 306 theory 139-40, 175, 190, 228, 304, 314 Organizational behaviors 30, 129, 290, 293, 296, 309, 381, 387, 390-4, 398, 402-4, 407 capabilities 140, 171, 187-8, 305, 349, 356 change 26, 35, 109, 113, 197, 287, 299, 354 communication 367, 372-3, 375-8 conflicts 369, 371-2, 379, 381, 383-4 design 110-1, 118-20, 172, 182, 185, 299 dynamics 62-3, 102-3, 154, 236, 381, 388, 393, 396 fitness 329-32 goals 46, 50, 54-5, 144 leadership 1, 45, 55, 163, 187, 190, 305, 333, 349, 379, 383 learning 35, 51-2, 94, 118, 131, 184, 227, 306 levels 28, 100, 132, 189, 239, 363 members 137, 151-2, 305, 400 structures 28, 83, 113, 118-21, 131, 144, 157, 227, 250, 325 studies 35, 62, 306, 404 systems 4, 27, 124, 131, 171, 227, 232, 235-6, 245, 291, 295, 363 theory 1, 58, 85, 163, 255, 305 transformation 17, 114, 290, 293-4, 312, 377, 387
472
Paradigm 18, 24, 58, 94, 149, 158, 163, 230-1, 243, 374, 397 Paradox 27, 30, 124-5, 229, 232, 305, 309, 324 Participants 55, 82, 135, 138, 207, 249, 285, 319, 334, 340, 342, 344, 346-7, 356, 394-8, 405-6 Participation 43, 49, 58, 109, 155, 187, 197-203, 247, 252, 316, 343, 363, 383, 394, 409 levels 197, 199, 200, 202 limiting 198-9, 201, 203 Pathologies, social 27, 249-50, 268 Patterns 6, 11, 59, 67, 70, 77-8, 88, 126-7, 157, 289, 294-5, 297-302, 387, 389-92, 396, 406-11 Peer pressure 11, 174, 195, 197-203, 211 Performance 18, 102, 117, 120, 139, 144-5, 156, 168-9, 171, 177-81, 190-3, 211-2, 239-40, 262, 272-5, 277-80 optimal 175, 273, 275, 279 organizational 114, 116, 131, 227, 273 Power laws 97, 100, 177, 290, 297-8 utilitarian 251-2, 260, 267 Problem solving 126, 350-1, 354-5, 357-8, 361 Processes 3, 4, 43-7, 72-3, 85-7, 89, 90, 93-5, 136-7, 146-7, 187-9, 244, 307-10, 315-8, 321-4, 334-5, 373-6, 396-8 dynamic 134, 308, 313-4, 318, 324, 332, 353 organizational 90, 150, 290, 324, 368
Random numbers 168, 179-81, 191-2, 202 Randomness 39, 64, 70, 74, 87-9, 91 Reductionism 49, 51-3, 55, 57, 59, 62, 79, 369-70 Relationships 8, 9, 35-9, 41-3, 48, 55, 57-9, 115-6, 141, 152, 175-6, 17981, 297-8, 309-10, 361, 371-2, 397-9 Resources 4, 5, 9, 45, 53, 63, 91, 102, 104-5, 150, 152, 175, 187, 235-6, 307, 317-8, 332 Rules 5, 9, 66-8, 83, 100, 111, 118, 135-6, 146-7, 250-1, 268, 291, 299301, 358-60, 365, 377 adaptive 152, 154, 156 biased 68, 74
Index
473
Scapegoats 30, 109-11, 113-5, 127 Self-interest 10, 247, 249, 252, 267-8 Self-organization 4-6, 29, 31, 61-3, 65, 67, 69-74, 78-9, 87-91, 99, 100, 124, 271-2, 389-91, 393-4, 407, 410-1 Self-organized criticality 97, 293, 296-7 dynamics 395-6, 401, 404, 408-10 pattern detection 389, 398-9, 402, 404, 407, 409-10 patterns 294, 387, 389-94, 397-8, 401-4, 406-11 Self-organizing processes 62-4, 66, 68-74, 78, 82, 87-8, 90-1, 244, 291, 310, 389 systems 62, 64, 67-9, 71-2, 383, 411 Self-transcending constructions 8, 61, 72-82, 86, 89, 91 Shared leadership 55, 134, 156, 190, 305, 308-9, 311, 313-5, 317, 319-20, 322-4 Simplicity 57, 66, 70, 192, 215, 257, 298, 307, 333-42, 344-5 Simplification 34, 215, 333, 336, 338, 341, 343-4, 347 Simulations 5, 68, 98, 100, 103, 105, 138, 176-7, 186-7, 206-7, 216-7, 219-20, 222-3, 254-6, 262-7, 270 agent-based 169, 195, 206-7, 288, 291 Skills 9, 11, 100, 105, 132, 134, 147, 151, 158, 180-2, 230, 308, 315, 317, 319-22, 347 Social capital 105, 190, 229, 231-5, 237, 239, 242, 244 complexity 29, 367, 377-9, 381-2, 384 network 101-2, 139-40, 148, 177, 195, 197, 201, 228, 231, 235-6, 300-1 analysis 131, 139, 227, 235 sciences 1, 2, 19, 36, 38, 43, 47, 159, 163, 165, 301, 305, 325, 349 structure 38, 41-3, 52-3, 134, 139, 186, 231, 301, 316 systems 5, 19, 23-4, 27-8, 35-43, 49, 51-2, 55, 57-9, 62, 69, 82, 295, 310, 313-4, 345 Stability 22-4, 43, 49, 59, 111-2, 124-5, 265, 296, 338, 340 Strange attractors 86, 290, 314, 321 Strategies 4, 7, 46, 69, 118-9, 147, 165-6, 207-8, 253, 299, 300, 302, 333, 340, 359, 398, 403-5 Structures 38, 41-2, 50-3, 69, 70, 72-3, 77-8, 80-1, 90, 100-2, 118-20, 13940, 154-7, 289-92, 311-4, 316-7, 377-9 internal 52, 297-9, 301 Study participants 393-4, 396-405, 407-11 Sub-systems 51, 354, 357-8 Surprise 112, 338, 387, 398-402 System dynamics 30, 138, 166-7, 171, 185, 187, 288, 290, 293, 296, 365 modeling 138, 166-7, 185-6 performance 168, 183, 249, 272, 275, 277-8, 354
474
Systems discourse, social 37-8, 43, 49, 52, 55, 59 theory 9, 36-8, 42-3, 48, 58, 288, 293, 369
Tasks 51, 119, 175-7, 208-10, 235-6, 238-9, 247, 255-6, 262, 264-5, 268-9, 308, 310-1, 314-5, 317-21, 358 Team members 179-81, 206-7, 211, 308-9, 311-2, 316-24, 351 performance 178-81, 207, 274, 309 Teams 83, 125, 130, 164, 169-71, 176, 178-80, 182-3, 215-6, 237-40, 242, 307-8, 311, 313-25, 353-4, 360 cross-functional 124, 273, 279, 361 Technology 34, 106, 130, 143, 328-9, 350, 357-9, 361-3 Tension 23-4, 27, 49, 53, 124-7, 129, 133, 136, 141, 156, 233, 244, 334, 338-40, 345-6, 410-1 sustaining 109, 119, 121, 124-5 Top-down 17, 22, 27-8, 104-7, 144, 147-9, 153, 157-8, 230-1, 307 Top management teams 103, 115, 171, 182-4, 305 Traditional leadership 25, 143-4, 146, 148, 152-4, 156-8, 305, 310 theories 22, 24, 144, 146, 155, 227, 229-30, 232, 411 Traits 5, 22, 44, 47-8, 114, 138, 230, 294, 298-9, 315, 349, 351 Transactional leadership 19, 54, 116, 188-9, 319 Transformational leadership 19, 30, 54, 111, 114, 116-7
U V
Unexpected behaviors 290, 396, 398, 400, 403, 405-6 Unpredictability 3, 87-9, 112, 144, 372
Values 19, 37, 40, 48, 54, 58-9, 92, 121-3, 168-9, 180-3, 192-3, 275-7, 279-80, 290-1, 344, 354 Visions, indeterminate 149, 154-6, 159
W Y
Index
Work teams 307, 311, 313, 324, 345 Workplaces 29, 89, 387, 389-91, 393-401, 403-5, 407-9, 411
475