ABSTRACT

This book is concerned with how people come together to achieve a productive purpose. Human survival has always depended upon our ability to form and sustain social organisations. People have a deep need to be creative and to belong. By creating positive organisations we can fulfil these needs and build a worthwhile society. Such organisations do not occur by chance; a positive organisation is created by the hard work of leaders and members and influenced by the way the organisation is designed, especially its systems. All this needs to be based on an understanding of sound, general principles of behaviour. This book outlines that work; how to build a positive organisation in terms of general principles and practical examples. Understanding and applying this work requires discipline (not dogma) and creativity. The authors show the significant positive results that can be achieved and detail a range of case studies. Unlike some books which are based on goals, objectives or visions this book concentrates on how this can be achieved. The authors observed and engaged with what good leaders and members actually do and have endeavoured to distil the essence of productive relationships based on core, human values. This work has been applied in businesses, social service agencies, hospitals, city governments, national governments, armies, churches, public utilities, indigenous communities, schools and other unique organisations. It is intended to help leaders create more humane and productive organisations that can both meet their objectives and improve the human condition. It does so by presenting a coherent theory exemplified by numerous cases and practical experience. As more than one leader has commented, 'this stuff actually works'. The CD supplied with the book contains 11 case studies which look at the application of systems leadership techniques in a range of organisational contexts.

part |2 pages

Part 1 Principles of Behaviour

chapter 1|26 pages

Principles of Behaviour

part |2 pages

Part 2 The Nature of Work and Organisations

chapter 2|6 pages

What is Work?

chapter 3|14 pages

Human Capability

chapter 4|6 pages

Meritocracy

chapter 5|8 pages

Associations and Employment Hierarchies

chapter 7|6 pages

Leadership, Power and Authority 79

chapter 8|14 pages

Levels of Work

part |2 pages

Part 3 Systems Leadership

chapter 10|8 pages

Leadership, Policy and Systems

chapter 11|16 pages

Task Formulation and Assignment

chapter 12|12 pages

Authorities and Role Relationships

chapter 13|30 pages

Key Systems

chapter 14|14 pages

Teams and Teamwork

part |2 pages

Part 4 Making Change Happen – Putting Theory into Practice