AI Article Synopsis

  • - This research examines different leadership styles and their effects on followers, focusing on perceptions of behaviors such as abusive supervision, transformational leadership, and various management styles.
  • - Through analysis of data from over 1,300 working adults, three distinct patterns of follower responses to leadership were identified: one constructive (high on transformational and contingent reward) and two destructive (high on passive management styles, with one including abusive supervision).
  • - The study highlights significant impacts of these leadership styles on worker outcomes, showing that passive-abusive leadership severely harms physical health, while passive leadership alone negatively affects psychological well-being, underlining the nuanced differences between types of passiveness.

Article Abstract

This research responds to calls for a more integrative approach to leadership theory by identifying subpopulations of followers who share a common set of perceptions with respect to their leader's behaviors. Six commonly researched styles were investigated: abusive supervision, transformational leadership (TFL), contingent reward (CR), passive and active management-by-exception (MBE-P and MBE-A, respectively), and laissez faire/avoidant (LF/A). Study hypotheses were tested with data from four independent samples of working adults, three from followers ( = 855) and a validation sample of leaders ( = 505). Using latent profile analysis, three pattern cohorts emerged across all four samples. One subpopulation of followers exhibited a constructive pattern with higher scores on TFL and CR relative to other styles. Two cohorts exhibited destructive patterns, one where the passive styles of MBE-A, MBE- and LF/A were high relative to the other styles (passive) and one where the passive styles co-occurred with abusive supervision (passive-abusive). Drawing on conservation of resources theory, we confirmed differential associations with work-related (i.e., burnout, vigor, perceived organizational support and affective organizational commitment) and context-free (i.e., physical health and psychological well-being) outcomes. The passive-abusive pattern was devastating for physical health, yet passiveness without abuse was damaging for psychological well-being. Interestingly, we find a clear demarcation between passiveness as "benign neglect" and passiveness as an intentional and deliberate form of leadership aimed at disrupting or undermining followers-hence, the two faces of passiveness: "bad" and "ugly." We discuss the novel insights offered by a pattern (person)-oriented analytical strategy and the broader theoretical and practical implications for leadership research.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9720459PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/01492063211050391DOI Listing

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