Leadership studies refuse to sit still. Fourteen fresh papers arrive from six continents and speak in one voice: yesterday’s command-and-control playbook is finished. Instead, scholars track how inclusion rewires productivity, how entrepreneurial fire ignites patents in Bangalore garages, how Kyiv principals parcel authority under air-raid sirens, and how Malaysian rice-field agents quietly build villages. A systematic reading of these texts yields five clear threads: (1) inclusion as a performance engine, (2) entrepreneurial leadership as an innovation trigger, (3) distributed authority as survival craft, (4) confidence as the hidden currency of influence, and (5) systemic blockages that choke resilience. This paper maps the geography of methods and the migration of theories. It closes with a seven-point research agenda that editors, deans, and CEOs can paste above their desks. In an age of polycrisis, leadership scholarship has stopped describing heroes and started engineering systems.
Lee Michael (Mon,) studied this question.
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