2022
DOI: 10.3390/su14020837
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Falling Apart and Coming Together: How Public Perceptions of Leadership Change in Response to Natural Disasters vs. Health Crises

Abstract: Responding to disruptions and crises are challenges public leaders face as they strive to lead responsibly for the good of the community. The last two years have been especially challenging for public leaders and institutions. In Australia, the federal government battled natural disasters (bushfires) and COVID-19 within the span of only a few months, beginning in late 2019. These events provided the opportunity for a natural experiment to explore public perceptions of leadership in times of crises, with both a… Show more

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Cited by 5 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…This indicates that in general sports students have pretty good inner leadership. Good leadership has a goal for the greater good and is created through complex and multifaceted constructions that cannot be separated (Wheeler et al, 2022). The indicators that become a reference in leadership are competence, empathy, integrity, assertiveness, and authority (Pitaloka & Ivanna, 2018).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This indicates that in general sports students have pretty good inner leadership. Good leadership has a goal for the greater good and is created through complex and multifaceted constructions that cannot be separated (Wheeler et al, 2022). The indicators that become a reference in leadership are competence, empathy, integrity, assertiveness, and authority (Pitaloka & Ivanna, 2018).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ethics approval was granted by the Swinburne University of Technology Human Research Ethics Committee, and all participants were asked to provide their informed consent prior to taking part. The questionnaire was administered quarterly (in three-month intervals, with no returning participants) from September 2018 and monthly thereafter, and we collected demographic variables and responses to a range of questions relating to people's perceptions of the common good and leadership in Australia -see Wheeler et al (2022) for an overview. The ongoing collection of data over the course of each month helped to minimize any noise related to specific events in a news cycle that might influence one time point within the respective month.…”
Section: Australian Leadership Index Datasetmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Work–life balance or integration was a major challenge throughout the pandemic for all Australians, 12,13 but arguably more so for women. The evidence is stacking up: a disproportionate amount of the domestic and caring load fell to women during the COVID‐19 lockdowns and restrictions, 14 which were particularly harsh and long in Australia 15 . This included the childcare of younger children, home schooling, caring for aging family members, and even extended to increased housework for women (fathers’ levels also rose but were not equal to those of mothers).…”
Section: The Onus Of Caring At Home and As Leadersmentioning
confidence: 99%