Leadership, Ethics, and the Centrality of Character

In Military Ethics and Leadership. Leiden & Boston: Brill. pp. 1-15 (2017)
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Abstract

Scandals in business (such as Volkswagen’s dieselgate and, earlier, the Enron scandal), politics and the public sector (the Petrobas affair in Brazil, for in-stance), sports (think of the corruption charges against fifa’s Sepp Blatter) and the military (Abu Ghraib springs to mind) have brought the matter of ethical leadership to the forefront. But although this increased attention has had the collateral benefit that most handbooks on leadership now pay more attention to the importance of leading ethically, this will generally still be in a separate chapter. To make thing worse, that chapter on leadership is more often than not one the last chapters of the book, perhaps followed by a chapter on, say, diversity. This all testifies to the fact that leadership and ethics are ha-bitually treated as related though separate spheres. It would be much better, of course, if leadership and ethics were treated as belonging to a single domain. Ethics is clearly an aspect of leadership, and not a separate approach that ex-ists alongside other approaches to leadership such as the trait approach, the situational approach, etc.. Interestingly, this thinking and writing about ethical leadership as just one approach among many other leadership styles appears to be a relatively recent invention. In the works of Plato, Plutarch, Machiavelli and Locke, for example, we see (political) leadership and ethics dealt with as a single subject. It was not before the twentieth century that we saw the rise of a separate leadership industry. Its results are largely unimpressive; it has not made leaders necessarily more effective, let alone more ethical.

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Peter Olsthoorn
Netherlands Defence Academy

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References found in this work

No Character or Personality.Gilbert Harman - 2003 - Business Ethics Quarterly 13 (1):87-94.
What’s the Point of Teaching Ethics in the Military.Jessica Wolfendale - 2008 - In Paul Robinson, Nigel De Lee & Don Carrick (eds.), Ethics Education in the Military. Ashgate. pp. 161--174.
Reconciling situational social psychology with virtue ethics.Surendra Arjoon - 2008 - International Journal of Management Reviews 10 (3):221-243.

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