Title: Power, Ethics, and Leadership
1Power, Ethics, and Leadership
- As a first principle of good stewardship we will
ensure that no person has reason to look back on
their association with us with anything but
pride. It would be a failure of leadership if our
soldiers and civilian workforce looked upon their
service to this organization with a sense of
shame.
George E. Reed, Ph.D. george.reed_at_sandiego.edu 619
-940-4102
2Agenda
- Thoughts on Leadership
- Fostering an ethical climate
- Character or situation as drivers of individual
behavior? - Bathsheba Syndrome- Screwing Up Big Time
3Americans hold the military in a position of
extraordinary trust and confidence
Rosenthal, S. A. (2011). National Leadership
Index 2011 A National Study of Confidence in
Leadership. Center for Public Leadership, Harvard
Kennedy School, Harvard University, Cambridge,
Massachusetts.
4Leadership Style
The pattern of leadership behavior as perceived
by others.
- Style always matters.
- Video trumps audio.
- Leaders should do more listening than telling,
more understanding than directing.
5Speaking up and listening down
- People desperately want to please you.
- Every action has a reaction.
- It is lonely at the top.
- There is no such thing as a casual conversation.
- The boss can never have a bad day.
6Discussion What can you do you?
- What specific actions can you take to foster an
ethical climate where straight-talk flows up and
down the organizational structure?
7Fostering an Ethical Climate
- Reward and develop the straight-talkers protect
the mustangs. - Celebrate those who take principled positions.
- Receive bad news well never shoot the messenger.
- Be a role model for speaking truth to power.
- Two ears, two eyes, and one mouth- use them in
those proportions. Watch for weak signals. - We dont do that here equals success.
8Fostering an Ethical Climate
- Tolerate some level of failure for the sake of
learning and experimentation. - Conduct after-action reviews, not post-mortems.
- You dont have to pretend to be the smartest
person in the room. - Avoid giving the answer before you ask the
question. - Praise in public, criticize in private.
- Dont be a toxic leader.
9Charting the ethical slide- Red Flags
- Failure to note the situational imperative
(systems and pressures). Ethical breaches are
chalked up to individual character flaws. - Rules and guidelines become a game to be won or
lost. - This is a new environment that calls for new
rules the old rules no longer apply. - Ethics becomes the purview of the lawyers instead
of the leaders. - Mission/resource mismatch.
- Its all about the rules (minimalist approach)
and not about the values (inspirational approach).
10Charting the ethical slide-Red Flags
- Principled positions are not celebrated.
- There is no one who will listen when an ethical
dilemma or transgression is pointed out
whistleblowers are destroyed. - Values are simply posters and bumper stickers
Do the right thing. - The results are all that is important and there
is no discussion about how the results are
achieved Just get it done. - There are conflicts between espoused values and
enacted values.
11Ripped from the Headlines
12The Bathsheba Syndrome
- Ethical violations are the by-product of success.
- Successful people become complacent and lose
focus. - They have privileged access to information,
people or resources. - They have an inflated belief in their personal
ability to manipulate outcomes. - Temptation comes with success and privilege.
13The Character Project
- Calls for self-mastery and habituation to the
higher good. Traits and virtues. (Aristotle). - Unethical behavior is the result of weakness,
pathology, undeveloped character, or lack of
moral fiber. - We see this in character development programs
(indoctrination, exhortation, values). - Prominent in leader development and legalistic
approaches. - Locus of control sits with the individual moral
agent. - A world of good apples and bad apples.
14Issues
- We just arent very good at influencing
character. - Mostly based on armchair theorizing.
- People are remarkably inconsistent in their
character and personality traits good today, bad
tomorrow, or good in one context and bad in
another. - Situation and context influence human behavior
much more than we think.
15Its Not About Character
all
Stanford Prison Experiment Obedience to
Authority Experiments The Helium Stick Eyes on
the cup experiment
16- Dan Ariely- Just How Moral Are We?
Start at 418 Stop at 1310
17Golden Nuggets
- The profession of arms is one of significant
moral hazard. - Leadership is a key variable in promoting unit
climate. - Bad stuff happens. The question is, just how fast
will you hear about it and have an opportunity to
intervene. - Peer behavior has a powerful influence on ethical
behavior. - Our conduct is influenced by subtle psychological
and social cues. - We cannot rely on character.
- We can and should prepare leaders for temptations
inherent with power and authority.
18Keep in touch
- George E. Reed, Ph.D.
- 619-940-4102
- george.reed_at_sandiego.edu
- george.reed_at_us.army.mil
19Discussion Questions
- What can we do to ensure that we will hear from
those who have moral misgivings about whats
going on in their unit? - What can we do to encourage the expression of
alternative views, doubts, and loyal dissent? - What techniques and tips can you recommend to
ensure that your colleagues are working in a
manner consistent with Army values. - What can we do to encourage collaboration and
flow of information across organizational
boundaries?