“…Although Follett was proposing a vision of leadership as a dynamic and transformational process of integrating based on a "power-with" rather than "power over" orientation, she did not actually propose any model. It is in this context that we propose a model that is simple and accessible enough so people, in general, and leaders and executives in diverse environments, specifically, can identify with and use it to develop their own individual and collective leadership; and a model that addresses core contemporary leadership areas and models, according to Batistič, Černe, and Vogel (2017), including o transformational leadership (Bass et al, 2003;Bono & Judge, 2003), o emotions and emotional intelligence (George, 2000;Sy, Côté, & Saavedra, 2005;Wilderom, Hur, Wiersma, Berg, & Lee, 2015), o authentic leadership (Avolio & Gardner, 2005;Walumbwa, Avolio, Gardner, Wernsing, & Peterson, 2008), o shared leadership (Pearce & Conger, 2002), o ethical leadership (Brown, Treviño, & Harrison, 2005), o organizational justice (Colquitt, Conlon, Wesson, Porter, & Ng, 2001), and o complexity, context, and leadership (Osborn, Hunt, & Jauch, 2002). This study, with its constructivist developmental lens, investigates a model that while integrating recurrent bidimensional factors of leadership focuses on the intrapersonal and interpersonal processes that are seen to be linked to the development of new patterns of knowing and meaning making we associate with leadership at the individual and collective levels.…”