Mitigating anxiety : the role of strategic leadership groups during radical organizational change.
Abstract
This paper examines the role of strategic leadership groups in radical organizational change. Previous research has focused on how ‘heroic’ individual leaders guide change. In contrast, we argue that strategic leadership groups are indispensable to understanding and supporting radical organizational change. Building on a longitudinal study in a global European company, our research identifies four phases of ‘negotiated order’ that shape group and organisational responses to change. Our findings reveal that strategic leadership groups help with the management of emotions, and with understanding the shifting authority relations that inevitably arise during periods of change. Drawing upon the psychoanalytic concept of ‘projective identification’, we develop a theoretical framework for understanding the tensions of change. The model shows how emotional coalitions that develop in strategic leadership groups afford a source of political and psychological containment against the anxieties of radical organisational change. These formations offer transitional spaces for change, providing opportunities for progress. The advantage of this new perspective on radical change is that it helps to move the organization beyond periods of ambivalence and conflict, with positive implications for leadership practice.
Citation
Jarrett , M & Vince , R 2023 , ' Mitigating anxiety : the role of strategic leadership groups during radical organizational change. ' , Human Relations , vol. Online First . https://doi.org/10.1177/00187267231169143
Publication
Human Relations
Status
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0018-7267Type
Journal article
Collections
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