2010
DOI: 10.1080/08995601003644346
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The “Bright” and “Shadow” Aspects of In Extremis Leadership

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Cited by 23 publications
(15 citation statements)
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References 74 publications
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“…Summarizing studies of combat leadership, Campbell et al (2010) conclude that leadership effectiveness is enhanced by shared mental models, leader creativity, emotion management, a cohesive team climate and successful performance. One study involved Australian military advisors who had served in the Vietnam War (Fisher et al, 2010). That research identified 10 ‘bright’ (desirable) competencies and 3 ‘shadow’ (negative) themes.…”
Section: Leadership In Extreme and Crisis Contextsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Summarizing studies of combat leadership, Campbell et al (2010) conclude that leadership effectiveness is enhanced by shared mental models, leader creativity, emotion management, a cohesive team climate and successful performance. One study involved Australian military advisors who had served in the Vietnam War (Fisher et al, 2010). That research identified 10 ‘bright’ (desirable) competencies and 3 ‘shadow’ (negative) themes.…”
Section: Leadership In Extreme and Crisis Contextsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…PTSD is thought to be more widespread in the general population than acknowledged (O'Connor, Lasgaard, Spindler, & Elklit, 2007), highlighting the need to study leadership capacity while experiencing PTSS or PTSD in military and non-military populations. Similar to in extremis leadership, or leadership in extreme situations (Fisher, Hutchings, & Sarros, 2010;Kolditz, 2007), military trauma studies have implications for non-military leaders and organizations, even though the contexts differ. For example, research on PTSD and military leadership may apply to first responders (e.g., firefighters, police) and civilian trauma survivors of events (e.g., motor vehicle accidents, natural disasters, traumatic medical experiences, and crime) as the extreme nature of experiences raise similar existential questions and victims may follow a similar recovery process (Howell, 2006;Matthews, 2014).…”
Section: Discussmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Como factor grupal, el apoyo psicosocial de compañeros es un elemento determinante en la incidencia del estrés [6][7][8][9][10][11][12] . Asimismo se subraya la importancia de la confianza en los compañeros y en el mando como requisito para un adecuado liderazgo 15,[39][40][41] , y de igual modo en la aproximación basada en la toma de sentido en contextos peligrosos 42 . Ésta influye en la disposición del subordinado para aceptar los intentos de influencia de un líder en contextos normalizados 43 .…”
Section: El Abordajeunclassified
“…Diversos autores resaltan su importancia 15,[39][40][41] . La confianza emerge también como un importante requisito del liderazgo en la aproximación basada en la toma de sentido en contextos peligrosos 42 .…”
Section: Tabla 1 Comparación De Medias En Las Distintas Variables Obunclassified