What makes a good leader? Ten leaders, ten key virtues
This readable distillation of the core common features of successful leaders shows how an individual’s character, and especially their virtue, is the defining factor. Without these ten vital virtues, leadership becomes ‘misleadership.’ The authors, both renowned business ethicists, combine theory with fascinating biographical detail on exemplary leaders such as Abraham Lincoln, Winston Churchill, and Oprah Winfrey. The result is an accessible text on the ethics of leadership which, unlike many publications that claim to reveal the secrets of success as a leader, is informed by a wealth of exceptional academic experience.
表中的内容
About the Authors x
Prologue xi
Part I Character Leadership 1
1 What Is Leadership? 3
A Reflection 4
Ethics, Virtue, and Character 9
2 Misleadership 13
What Is Bad Leadership? 14
Misleaders 15
Bad Followers 17
A Few Examples 18
3 Character and Leadership 22
Character and Integrity 24
The Dark Side of Character 28
Character as Goodwill 35
4 Leadership and Business Excellence 38
Ethics in Business 39
Workplace Ethics 41
Leaders as Role Models 42
A Culture of Narcissism 44
5 The Ten Virtues 47
Deep Honesty 51
Moral Courage 53
Moral Vision 54
Compassion and Care 55
Fairness 58
Intellectual Excellence 60
Creative Thinking 62
Aesthetic Sensitivity 63
Good Timing 64
Deep Selfl essness 65
Part II Leadership in Action 71
6 James Burke and the Tylenol Poisoning Episodes: Deep Honesty
73
Burke’s Rise to Leadership 74
Response to Crisis 75
A Further Challenge 78
7 Abraham Lincoln/Rosa Parks: Moral Courage 81
Courage: Physical and Moral 82
Team of Rivals 84
An Important Bus Ride 86
Shared Convictions 87
8 Winston Churchill: Moral Judgment and Moral Vision 90
Churchill versus Halifax 91
The War Cabinet Meets 94
Churchill’s Judgment 99
The Hinge of Fate 103
9 Oprah Winfrey: Compassion and Care 106
Star Status and More 107
Her Fan Base 109
The Book Club 111
Leadership Is a Relationship 113
10 Dwight D. Eisenhower, the Sicilian Slapping Incidents:
Fairness 117
The Slapping Incidents 118
The Challenges Ike Faced 120
Ike’s Response 122
11 FDR and the A-Bomb: Intellectual Excellence 127
The Scientifi c Background 128
Roosevelt’s Preparation for Leadership 129
Hitler’s Ascent to Leadership 133
The A-Bomb Decision: The United States 136
The A-Bomb Decision: Germany 139
12 Herb Kelleher and the People of Southwest Airlines:
Creative Thinking 145
Southwest’s Start 146
Southwest’s Service Innovations 147
Southwest and Its People 150
13 Steve Jobs and Apple: Aesthetic Sensitivity 158
Beginnings 158
The Macintosh 160
The Whole Widget 162
Learning from Failure 164
Apple Reborn 167
The Centrality of Design 170
14 Charles de Gaulle and Exiting Algeria: Good Timing 173
Youth and the First World War 174
Up to the Battle of France 175
Postwar Retreat amidst Political and Military Turmoil 177
Taking Command 179
Aftermath 183
15 Martin Luther King, Jr.: Deep Selflessness 185
His Calling 187
His Gift 189
His Legacy 193
16 Conclusion 195
Index 203
关于作者
Al Gini is Professor of Business Ethics at Loyola
University Chicago, USA, where he is also Chair of the Department
of Management in the Quinlan School of Business. A co-founder and
long-time associate editor of Business Ethics Quarterly, the
journal of the Society for Business Ethics, Professor Gini has for
25 years been the resident philosopher on the NPR affiliate in
Chicago, WBEZ-FM, and is a regular speaker on the public lecture
circuit. His books include The Ethics of Business (2012),
which he co-authored with Alexei Marcoux; Seeking The Truth of
Things (2010); Why It’s Hard to Be Good (2006);
and The Importance of Being Lazy: In Praise of Play, Leisure and
Vacations (2003).
Ronald M. Green is Eunice & Julian Cohen Professor
for the Study of Ethics and Human Values at Dartmouth College, USA.
He served as the director of Dartmouth’s Ethics Institute
from 1992 until 2011. Professor Green is actively involved in
numerous fields of applied ethics, particularly bioethics and
business ethics, and is a consultant to a number of leading
corporations including Ogilvy & Mather. A former director of
the National Institutes of Health’s National Human Genome
Research Institute, Professor Green has also been a member of the
NIH’s Human Embryo Research Panel. He was awarded a
Guggenheim Fellowship in 2005. Professor Green’s many
publications include The Ethical Manager (1993) and
Babies by Design (2007).