This conceptual article examines adaptive leadership as a key psychologicalresource for improving the effectiveness of managerial decision-making incontemporary organizations. Unlike approaches that treat leadership style as a fixedpersonal preference, the article argues that decision quality depends on a leader'scapacity to shift between directive, participative, transformational, transactional, andsupportive behaviors in accordance with contextual demands. The analysisintegrates leadership theory, organizational psychology, bounded rationality,procedural justice, and psychological safety in order to explain how leadershipbehavior influences problem definition, evaluation of alternatives, commitment toimplementation, and organizational learning. It is argued that effective managerialdecisions should be assessed not only by speed or formal correctness, but also bylegitimacy, communicative clarity, ethical accountability, and sustainability ofoutcomes. The paper shows that adaptive leadership is especially important underconditions of uncertainty, role complexity, and institutional change, where rigidreliance on one leadership style may distort information flow, suppress dissent, orweaken implementation. The article concludes that the most effective leaders arethose who combine authority with reflective dialogue, evidence-based judgment,and sensitivity to the socio-psychological climate of the organization.
AZAMAT NAZAROV (Fri,) studied this question.