Leadership

Leadership

Charisma or Leadership in Election Law

Quality of an exceptional person, often a politician, who creates a compelling feeling among others that he or she has the capacity to lead.

Literature Review on Leadership: High Integrity

In the Encyclopedia of Public Administration and Public Policy, [1] Mark L. McConkie and R. Wayne Boss provide the following summary about the topic of Leadership: High Integrity: Possessing those traits and characteristics that others deem as reflective of high integrity is one of the most powerful forms of leadership influence. Such influence is based on trustworthiness and exists at four levels of organizational interaction: the personal level, the interpersonal level, the managerial level, and the organizational level. High integrity exists where moral laws first exist, where perceptions of right and wrong exist, and where leaders make what are perceived to be right choices. High-integrity leadership is important as it is so long enduring—for example, people refer to, quote, and cite favorably the examples of high-integrity leaders long since dead. It is also associated with particular leadership styles, most prominently those located at the more participative end of a top–down, authoritarian–participative continuum.

Resources

See Also

  • Political System
  • Politics
  • Government

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Notes and References

  1. Entry about Leadership: High Integrity in the Encyclopedia of Public Administration and Public Policy (2015, Routledge, Oxford, United Kingdom)

See Also

Further Reading

  • Global Encyclopedia of Public Administration, Public Policy, and Governance (2018, Springer International Publishing, Germany)

Resources

See Also

  • Election Law
  • Electoral Laws
  • Electoral Legislation

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