Criminal Justice Organizations: Administration and Management - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Criminal Justice Organizations: Administration and Management

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Chapter Seven Leadership Comprehend the complexities of leadership in criminal justice organizations. Understand the many theories of leadership. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Criminal Justice Organizations: Administration and Management


1
Criminal Justice Organizations Administration
and Management
  • Chapter Seven Leadership

2
Learning Objectives
  • Comprehend the complexities of leadership in
    criminal justice organizations.
  • Understand the many theories of leadership.
  • Know the limitations of leadership research in
    criminal justice organizations.
  • Explain the importance of leadership development
    in criminal justice organizations.

3
Leadership Defined
  • Leadership is a process that effectively
    accomplishes organizational goals and is related
    to effectiveness.
  • Administrators can learn leadership skills.
  • Leadership is a group process.
  • Leadership in public bureaucracies is inherently
    political.

4
Theories of Leadership
  • Leadership research is a relatively new area of
    scholarly attention.
  • Most of what we know about leadership theory
    comes from the groundbreaking studies conducted
    at
  • Ohio State University (1940s), and
  • Michigan State University (1940s 1960s).

5
Theories of Leadership
  • Leadership theories can be loosely organized into
    one of the following traditions.
  • Leaders are born and not made
  • Leadership is behavioral
  • Leadership is contingency based

6
Theories of LeadershipBorn Leaders
  • Assumes
  • The ability to lead others is based on certain
    personality traits like the ability to relate to
    others, communication skills, or charisma.
  • Leadership is not a learned skill you either
    have it or you dont.
  • Leadership effectiveness is dependent upon
    finding a person with the personality type that
    can work well in a particular working
    environment.

7
Theories of LeadershipBorn Leaders
  • This approach was largely discredited when
    researchers understood the importance of
    contingencies.
  • Some leadership personalities are more or less
    effective in certain situations, but situations
    (contingencies) often change.
  • Some researchers continue to advocate that
    personality characteristics are an important
    element of leadership effectiveness.

8
Theories of LeadershipBehavioral Theories
  • Focus is on how leaders behave.
  • Effectiveness depends on how leaders interact
    with their subordinates to accomplish tasks
    (initiating structures).
  • This approach is also concerned with how workers
    achieve both organizational and personal goals
    simultaneously.
  • The perception of support from management is
    critical.
  • Creating a sense of belonging among employees is
    essential to effective leadership.

9
Theories of LeadershipContingency Theories
  • Emphasis is on how situational factors present in
    the workplace affect leadership.
  • Leadership effectiveness is determined by whether
    the leader responds appropriately to these
    situational factors (contingencies).
  • There are two principal approaches.

10
Theories of LeadershipContingency Theories
  • Fiedlers Contingency Model the leadership
    process is constrained by three major situational
    dimensions.
  • Leader-member relations
  • Task structure
  • Position power
  • Structured assessments of organizational
    contingencies enable leaders to identify their
    most appropriate leadership approach.

11
Theories of LeadershipContingency Theories
  • The application of Fiedlers Contingency Model in
    Criminal Justice may be difficult.
  • Given the nature of promotional selection it may
    not be possible to match the right leader to a
    specific task.
  • The overall lack of leadership training does not
    enable leaders to identify how their personality
    orientations affect leadership outcomes.

12
Theories of LeadershipContingency Theories
  • Path-Goal Theory the interaction between leader
    behavior and the situational aspects of the
    organization is important.
  • This particular theory is linked to the
    expectancy theory of human motivation.
  • Effective leadership is situational and does not
    depend on a single style of leadership.
  • The effectiveness of a leadership style is based
    on the degree of direction and guidance the
    leader provides.

13
Theories of LeadershipContingency Theories
  • Four Leadership Styles (Path-Goal Theory)
  • Directive
  • Supportive
  • Achievement-oriented
  • Participative
  • Leaders may adopt various styles depending on
  • The needs/desires of the employee,
  • The nature of the task, and
  • Environmental conditions.

14
Theories of LeadershipContingency Theories
15
Theories of LeadershipTransformational Leadership
  • This theory grew from dissatisfaction with trait,
    behavioral and contingency theories.
  • Focuses on how leaders transform organizations to
    produce results using
  • Mission and vision statements,
  • Goal setting, and
  • Creative solutions to organizational problems.

16
Leadership Research in Criminal Justice
  • Police leaders tend to have a preferred (single)
    leadership style.
  • Primarily a high task and high relationship
    style.
  • Strong communications skills.
  • Research on leadership in correctional agencies
    is very limited.
  • There is a substantial need for research on
    leadership throughout all parts of the criminal
    justice system.

17
Leadership EducationThe California Department of
Corrections Experience
  • Invested heavily in leadership development with
    an emphasis on education rather than training.
  • Developed essential elements of effective
    leadership.
  • Proactive traits (communication, honesty,
    knowledge)
  • Building relationships with employees
  • Balancing employee and organizational needs
  • Transform the culture when necessary
  • Able to use appropriate (contingency based)
    leadership tools as needed

18
Criminal Justice LeadershipA Brief Word on
Organizational Culture
  • Most criminal justice leaders either come up
    through the ranks or are elected.
  • Leaders are a product of the organizational
    culture.
  • The tendency to promote leaders from within
  • Restricts change in the organizational culture,
    and
  • May encourage corruption.

19
Chapter Summary
  • Leadership in criminal justice must be understood
    in a political context.
  • Poor leadership might be caused by a lack of
    understanding about political realities and
    complexities.
  • There are numerous theories that help us
    understand how leadership works.
  • There are benefits to applying various leadership
    models in criminal justice, however, not much
    testing of these models had occurred.
  • Our knowledge of how leadership models affect
    criminal justice agencies is limited.

20
Thinking Point and Question
  • Young people entering the policing profession
    today are part of the Generation Y and Millenial
    cohorts.
  • These generational cohorts are broadly
    characterized as culturally liberal,
    electronically savvy, motivated by rewards
    (Trophy Kids), and less likely remain employed
    by the same organization throughout their
    professional life.
  • Given what you have learned about leadership,
    what would be the most useful model for this
    generational cohort, and why?
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