Keywords
Abstract

Building on behavioural leadership theory and structuration theory, we present a two-order theory of leadership. It describes four classes of first-order leadership behaviours (task coordination, substantive task contribution, group maintenance and boundary spanning) and defines second-order leadership as behaviour that influences changes in the structure that guides group action. We argue that second-order leadership is enabled by first-order leadership and is therefore action embedded and grounded in processes that define the social identity of the group. We propose that effective virtual teams will exhibit a paradoxical combination of shared, distributed first-order leadership complemented by strong, concentrated, and centralized second-order leadership. We conclude by suggesting future research that might be conducted to test and further elaborate our theory.

Year of Conference
2007
Conference Name
Proceedings of the IFIP Working Group 8.2/9.5 Working Conference on Virtuality and Virtualization
Number of Pages
151–168
Publisher
Springer
Conference Location
Portland, OR
DOI
10.1007/978-0-387-73025-7_12