Title: Gender, Leadership and Change
1Gender, Leadership and Change
- Georgia Duerst-Lahti
- Tirana
2Women As Symbol
3Leadership can be
- Holding a position
- Holding a singular position
- Having followers who follow
- But, perception..
4Gender Paradigms
- Complementarity
- Individuality
- Corporative
- Civic
- Egality
5Complementarity
- sexed-bodies recommend gender roles
- gender roles exist regardless of who fills
- advantage in gender dualism pleasure in sex
difference - orthodoxy of roles and power relations
- masculine public, feminale home
6Individuality-Corporative
- interchangeable humans with potential
- gender roles are mere functions and choices
- desire a gender irrelevant public world
- blind to difference and structural constraints
- inequalities from individual action and choice
- free within extant masculinist system
7Individuality-Civic
- individuals more similar than different
- individual gender options within ordinary bounds
- deal with gendered inequalities
- masculine can learn from feminale
- approach change from inside extant masculinist
system
8Egality (Gender Mainstream)
- uncouple gender roles from sexed bodies
- move beyond gender orthodoxy
- increase value of feminale
- change boundaries of masculine
- add more sex-gender options
- construct new system
9Perceive Womens Leadership
Complementarity Individuality-Corporative Individuality- Civic Egality Gender Mainstream
Out of place Do it like a man Compete but change All types of humans lead
Some issues for women Mostly issues are for all Some issues for women All issues are gendered
OK if home is fine Up to individual Up to her, with help Recast ideas of a leader
10The process of change
11Precursors to Change
- Multiple versions of same point
- 80/20 principle (Vilfredo Pareto, Richard Koch)
- Accomplish most, with modest but well placed
effort - not 50-50 rule Equal effort to all parts
- Mental Representations
- Content (basic idea)
- Form (way content is presented)
12More on Content
- Concepts
- term, closely related entities
- Stories
- narratives of events over time
- Theories
- formal explanations of processes
- Skills (form and content)
- procedures know how to carry out
137 Rs of Mind Changing
- Reason
- Research
- Resonance
- Representational Redescriptions
- Resources and Rewards
- Real World Events
- Resistances
14Truisms About Mind Changing
- It is never easy Resistances
- 6 Rs combine in various ways
- Is unlikely to occur when resistances are strong
and other factors do not point strongly in one
direction
15Intelligences and a Mind Change
- Involves a change in mental representation
- How one thinks about an idea
- What (concept), how operates (theory), do (skill)
- Appealing to more intelligences increases chances
of mind change
16Some Types of Intelligence
- Symbolic Analytic
- Linguistic, logical, mathematical
- Noncanonical
- Musical, spacial, bodily-kinesthetic, naturalist
- Personal
- Inter, emotional, intra
- Existential
- Why? meaning
17Learned Earliest and Best
- Humans primed for some theories
- Correlation causes, reinforcement entrenches
- Early theories especially difficult to alter
- Conserve what we know naturally
- Predilection for parsimony
18Factors that Entrench
- Emotional resonance and commitment
- Easier
- Public commitment
- Personality
- Rigid and certain (authoritarian)
- Learn by conserving ideas
19Factors that Impel Change
- Proclivity to adopt a stance
- New environment powerfz ul, resource-rich option
- Mastery of current mental representation
- Superior mental representation
- Strong desire to understand better
- Competence
- Scaffolding (just enough support, willingness)
20Match Audience with Strategy
- Large change, diverse audience
- (e.g., nation)
- Large changes, shared audience
- (e.g., agency)
- Intimate
- (e.g., one key person)
- Yourself
21Change Large and Diverse
- Recognize, acknowledge, undermine current story
- Develop new, good story
- Construct evocative symbols
- Tell over and over
- Embody with action and symbol
- Help audience understand why better
227 Rs Large and Diverse Change
- Identify which representationsstories
- Imaginatively use reason, multiple
representations, resonance with experiences - Mollify resistances (anticipate, address)
- Take advantage of real world
- Marshal whatever resources possible
23Organizational Level
- Common knowledge, experience
- Shared purpose, common destiny
- Simpler changes trump complex ones
- But, complex easier in contained setting
24Steps to Changing Minds
- Learn from others (research)
- Challenge resistances in each key constituency
(directly and not) - Initiate new practices (resources, rewards)
- Have good new story (redescription)
- Work resonances, real world, and reason
- Time, toil, and trouble
25Failures of Org. Change
- Hyperbole in story
- Too few details, supporting facts
- Blinded by own aspirations
- Wrong resonance, reward
- Dont embody story
26Hallmarks of Effectiveness
- Intelligences
- Instinct
- Integrity
27Intelligences
- Know how to create right story, communicate
well, change if need be - Understand others motive, listen, respond
- Existential pose and answer own big questions,
share vision - Also logic-math, know oneself, hire smart
people, clear goals, act consistently, draw upon
shared, address schooled and unschooled mind
28Instincts
- Right move in particular situation
- Become aware of gut
- Put intuition into words, test on trusted others
- Learn from mistakes processes not blame
- Crises create opportunities
29Integrity
- Take time for daily reflection, analysis
- Go to the mountain top occasionally
- Be open to real world changes
- Be sensitive to valid strains in counter stories
- Commit deeply to mission
- Have humility about actual potency
30Think Different(ly)
- E.g., from telephones to information
- Provide info constantly
- Discuss difficulties frankly
- Commit to help land on feet
- Stories excite, resonate with reality, embody
truth - Have integrity
31Innovating in Public Organizations
32Qualities of Innovators
- Personal involvement
- Strives to achieve
- Sees self as instigator
- Plenty of imagination
- Critical and analytical thinker
- Leads and manages well
33To Lead Innovation
- Proactively seek improvements
- Broker power
- Know who and how
- Timing
- Find resources
- Gain support
- Trust, trust, trust
- Champion and Negotiate
- Listen, generate, ideas and strategies
- Encourage and sponsor (empower) followers
34Stages of Organizational Change
- Establish sense of urgency
- Create guiding coalition
- Develop vision and strategy
- Communicate change vision (over and over)
- Empower others
- Generate short term wins
- Consolidate change to produce more change
- Anchor new approaches in culture
35Skills to Master
- Creative problem-solving
- Visioning and strategic planning
- Framing and agenda setting
- Dialogue and commitment
- Analyze feasibility
- Pilot and experiment
- Empowering followers
- Redesign the organization
- Assess and get feedback
36Accounting for WomensLeadership Success
37Capable women, and..
38Success Formula
- female voters
- individual desire
- public policy
- implementation advocates
- time
- - tradition
- - backlash
- time (pipeline, comfort, reputation)
- Current Success
39Transgendered Elements of Success
- Hard work
- Perform beyond expectations
- Resilience
- Make self visible to policy makers or top
management - Take risks and act boldly
- Grow thick skin
40Why Bother? Women
- In office care more about womens policies than
do men. - Tend to have a more open style and democratic
than men - Bring life experiences to the table for all
issues - Democracy and legitimacy are at stake.
41Advice
- Choose battles wisely
- Take responsibility for your own development
- Use institutional resources you have
- Build your policy resources
- Run for office, get appointed.
42Only you can change your own mind
- Sometime events precipitate
- Usually happens gradually
- Slowly accumulate new info
- Intuit change more than decide
- Can do deliberately
- Desire
- Effort
- New mental representations
43And Finally
- Work on issues you care about
- Passion makes you willing to work
- Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful,
committed citizens can change the world. Indeed,
it is the only thing that ever has (Margaret
Mead).