Elsevier

The Leadership Quarterly

Volume 18, Issue 4, August 2007, Pages 298-318
The Leadership Quarterly

Complexity Leadership Theory: Shifting leadership from the industrial age to the knowledge era

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.leaqua.2007.04.002Get rights and content

Abstract

Leadership models of the last century have been products of top-down, bureaucratic paradigms. These models are eminently effective for an economy premised on physical production but are not well-suited for a more knowledge-oriented economy. Complexity science suggests a different paradigm for leadership—one that frames leadership as a complex interactive dynamic from which adaptive outcomes (e.g., learning, innovation, and adaptability) emerge. This article draws from complexity science to develop an overarching framework for the study of Complexity Leadership Theory, a leadership paradigm that focuses on enabling the learning, creative, and adaptive capacity of complex adaptive systems (CAS) within a context of knowledge-producing organizations. This conceptual framework includes three entangled leadership roles (i.e., adaptive leadership, administrative leadership, and enabling leadership) that reflect a dynamic relationship between the bureaucratic, administrative functions of the organization and the emergent, informal dynamics of complex adaptive systems (CAS).

Keywords

Leadership
Complexity theory
Complex adaptive systems (CAS)
Knowledge Era
Creativity
Adaptive organizations
Bureaucracy

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An earlier version of this paper was presented at the National Academy of Management Meeting in New Orleans, August, 2004.

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