Squires
- 4 September 2013
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Organizational Psychology Review
- Vol. 4 (3) , 199-227
- https://doi.org/10.1177/2041386613498765
Abstract
Drawing on several theoretical traditions in the social sciences, we offer a theory of the social facilitation of charismatic leadership by introducing the concept of squires. Squires are key followers who serve four social facilitation functions: liberating and legitimizing, modeling, buffering, and interpreting and translating. Liberating and legitimizing builds on social conformity research. Modeling is based in the social learning and social influence literatures. Buffering, and interpreting and translating, draw on insights from the psychology of power and organizational theory. These functions help resolve two central charismatic leadership paradoxes: (a) the need to be different from followers, though followers prefer to be led by leaders who are like them, and (b) the need to be personally inspiring to followers while being socially distant from them. In specifying squires’ functions, we also address three weaknesses in conceptions of followership and contribute to understandings of how charismatic leadership emerges, works, and endures.Keywords
This publication has 72 references indexed in Scilit:
- Motivation to Lead, Motivation to Follow: The Role of the Self-Regulatory Focus in Leadership ProcessesAcademy of Management Review, 2007
- A Conceptual Review of Decision Making in Social Dilemmas: Applying a Logic of AppropriatenessPersonality and Social Psychology Review, 2004
- Social Influence: Compliance and ConformityAnnual Review of Psychology, 2004
- Understanding the Dynamics of Leadership: The Role of Follower Self-Concepts in the Leader/Follower RelationshipOrganizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 1999
- The Charismatic Relationship: A Dramaturgical PerspectiveAcademy of Management Review, 1998
- Toward a Behavioral Theory of Charismatic Leadership in Organizational SettingsAcademy of Management Review, 1987
- The Dispersion of CharismaComparative Political Studies, 1983
- Substitutes for leadership: Their meaning and measurementOrganizational Behavior and Human Performance, 1978
- Conversion in a Billy Graham Crusade: Spontaneous Event or Ritual Performance?The Sociological Quarterly, 1975
- The effects of supervisory behavior on the path-goal relationshipOrganizational Behavior and Human Performance, 1970