ABSTRACT

Leaders, teams and organisational consultants are faced with a situation of permanent transitions. The current world of organisations is full of beginnings and incomplete endings. The author assumes that the endless re-structuring of living networks of relationships in organisations generates, over time, post-traumatic stress disorder in individuals, groups and the whole system. The book deals with the paradox that continuity is the most important factor in change and that leadership alone solves very little. Even the most heroic figure flounders without the help of the various groups in the organisation, which make things work. The author reflects on his practice of developing teams, professionals and organisations with an approach rooted in group analysis and social anthropology. The dominant way of looking at performance, motivation and leadership focuses on individuals and fails to take into account how we work together, how we fail to co-operate and how inter-dependent we are.

part I|38 pages

Experiential and Intuitive Knowledge

part II|39 pages

The Group Dynamics of Top-Down Change

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

part III|50 pages

The Use and Nature of the Large Analytic Groups

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter Four|46 pages

The large analytic group and its conductor *

part IV|50 pages

Support and Development for Health Professionals

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter Six|22 pages

“Patrix” and matrix: a generative pairing

part V|30 pages

Rethinking Organisational Leadership and Development

chapter |2 pages

Introduction

chapter Eight|6 pages

A paradigm shift in organisational development

part VI|5 pages

Ending

chapter Nine|3 pages

Conclusion: dealing with permanent transition