2015
DOI: 10.1177/1742715015591068
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Toward postheroic leadership: A case study of Gezi's collaborating multiple leaders

Abstract: This article explores how the Gezi Park protests in Istanbul, Turkey, exemplify the changing character of contemporary social movements, where teamwork and collaboration are supported and the ability to empower, support, and engage others is emphasized. We argue that the role of leadership in social movements in general and in the Turkish Gezi context specifically goes beyond the creation of traditional leaders. This new form of leadership is driven by the possibilities opened up by other democratic and collab… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…The ideal leadership style enabling professional agency and creativity is thus most likely somewhere in between the two extremes (managerialism and laissez‐faire) in an appropriate manner depending on the organization and changing situations (see e.g. Eslen‐ Ziya & Erhart, ; Salovaara & Bathurst, ). The very issue in our setting turned out to be that the existence of managerial hierarchies does not automatically generate conditions where a manager is also a leader, and vice versa; a non‐managerial arrangement does not produce leadership by itself.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…The ideal leadership style enabling professional agency and creativity is thus most likely somewhere in between the two extremes (managerialism and laissez‐faire) in an appropriate manner depending on the organization and changing situations (see e.g. Eslen‐ Ziya & Erhart, ; Salovaara & Bathurst, ). The very issue in our setting turned out to be that the existence of managerial hierarchies does not automatically generate conditions where a manager is also a leader, and vice versa; a non‐managerial arrangement does not produce leadership by itself.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…While the former tend to de-center the leader and move from "unitary command" to shared leadership (Pearce, Conger & Locke, 2008), the latter tend to explore the political possibilities of de-centering the figure of the leader (e.g. Eslen-Ziya & Erhart, 2015;Sutherland et al, 2014).…”
Section: From Heroic To Post-heroic Leadershipmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Proponents of the ‘liberated’ model promote ‘radical’ shifts in leadership, imagining effective leaders as distant, even absent, in the workplace. In focusing on de-centring leadership from the figure of the leader, ‘liberating leadership’ 1 echoes concepts of post-heroic leadership that are increasingly central to scholarly debates (Collinson, 2018; Eslen-Ziya & Erhart, 2015). Even as post-heroic conceptions – looking beyond unitary notions of the leader (Pearce, Conger, & Locke, 2008) – become pivotal to leadership debates, critical voices have begun to question the emancipatory potentials of such approaches (Costas & Taheri, 2012).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In so doing, we begin from an analysis of the narration of the Women’s March as a collaborative and contested process of co-constructing the organization and its leadership. We situate the analysis within current conceptual developments of post-heroic leadership as rebel or social movement leadership (Edwards, 2017; Eslen-Ziya and Erhart, 2015), and we discuss how the case of the Women’s March may further these developments.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%