嘉宾评论:危机时期的领导:政治和行政领导的交集

IF 0.8 Q4 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
Tim A. Mau, Richard F. Callahan, F. Ohemeng
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引用次数: 2

摘要

在2020年初,就在危机爆发之际,本杂志和许多其他杂志一样,试图加快与COVID-19大流行相关的研究。我们关注的是吸取一些关于全球公共领导人如何在危机中领导和管理他们的国家的早期教训,因为正如Boin和' t Hart (2003, p. 544)所指出的那样,“危机和领导力是紧密交织在一起的现象。”此外,我们知道,在危机情况下,各种形式的领导力和解决无数问题的领导力至关重要(t Hart and Tummers, 2019;哈特利,2018;Boin et al., 2017)。其结果是,去年出版了题为《危机时期的公共领导力——对应对新冠肺炎的政治和行政领导力的看法》的特刊(第17卷第1期),取得了巨大成功。在《新冠肺炎时代的公共领导力国际杂志》特刊创刊时,我们乐观地展望了这场全球大流行即将过去的时代,同时呼吁创刊第二期特刊,探讨应对冠状病毒大流行以外的危机局势中的公共领导力。具体而言,我们希望收到深入的、以理论为导向的研究报告,探讨政治家、公务员和民间社会行为体如何在应对不同类型的危机方面发挥领导作用——无论是政治危机(例如,应对和准备英国退欧)、社会和经济危机(例如,非洲的饥荒或干旱或亚洲的海啸)还是与健康有关的危机(包括全球严重急性呼吸系统综合症(SARS)危机或禽流感)。对这一大流行病的危机应对暴露了我们对公共领导的理解和实践的局限性。在新西兰、中国、美国、韩国和南非等国之间的对比中,全国范围内的反应和效果各不相同,仅举几例,这要求我们在显著不同的社会和制度背景下研究公共领导力的更有力方法。此外,即使在同一个国家,如美国,跨联邦、州、县和市政府的关系和权力的政府间维度要求对政府间维度进行专门的研究(Kizer和Callahan, 2021)。政府间研究开始发现不同的领导重点和不同的方法,甚至在同一级别的政府,如县(国家公共管理学院,2021)。领导人应对大流行病的挑战表明,我们目前对公共领导的理解是有限的。传统的政治-行政二分法在解释“混乱、无组织、脱节和笨拙”的治理结构中的公共领导方面几乎没有吸引力,并且在非正式网络中具有重要的权力(Abramson, 2021)。政治-行政二分法的研究效用在解释美国近30名公共卫生主任在COVID-19爆发的前三个月辞职或被迫辞职时,以及当行政人员不仅受到质疑,而且还受到民选官员和公众的口头和身体威胁时,就失效了(Mello等人,2020)。研究表明,危机,无论其起源如何,在成功处理时都有可能将“领导人转变为政治家”,或者如果不解决,恢复正常的时间被推迟或完全阻止,就有可能成为“明显的替罪羊”(Boin and ' t Hart, 2003,客座社论)
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Guest editorial: Leadership in times of crisis: the intersection of political and administrative leadership
In early 2020 just as the crisis was unfolding, this journal, like many others, attempted to expedite research related to the COVID-19 pandemic. Our concern was to draw some early lessons about how public leaders across the globe were leading andmanaging their countries through the crisis because, as Boin and ’t Hart (2003, p. 544) noted, “Crisis and leadership are closely intertwined phenomena.” Moreover, we know that in crisis situations, leadership, in varied forms and addressing myriad questions, is critical (’t Hart and Tummers, 2019; Hartley, 2018; Boin et al., 2017). The result was a very successful special issue published last year (Vol. 17, No. 1) entitled, “Public Leadership in Times of Crisis –Viewpoints on Political and Administrative Leadership in Response to COVID-19.” At the time that this special issue of the International Journal of Public Leadership in the time of COVID-19 issue was developed, we optimistically looked ahead to a time when this global pandemic would be behind us and simultaneously put out a call for a second special issue that would examine public leadership in response to crisis situations other than the one presented by the coronavirus pandemic. Specifically, we were interested in receiving in-depth, theoretically oriented research studies that addressed how politicians, public servants and civil society actors provide leadership in response to different kinds of crises –be they political (for example, responding to and preparing for Brexit), social and economic (such as a famine or drought in Africa or an Asian tsunami) or health-related (including the global severe acute respiratory syndrome [SARS] crisis, or the avian flu). The crisis responses to the pandemic have uncovered the limits of our understanding and practice of public leadership. The varied ranges of responses and effectiveness nationally, in the contrasts between New Zealand, China, the USA, South Korea and South Africa, to name but a few, call for more robust ways of researching public leadership across significantly different societal and institutional contexts. Moreover, even within the same nation, such as the USA, the intergovernmental dimension of relations and authorities across federal, state, county and city governments calls for research specific to intergovernmental dimensions (Kizer and Callahan, 2021). The intergovernmental research begins to find varied leadership emphasis and divergent approaches even within the same level of government, such as counties (National Academy of Public Administration, 2021). The challenges of leaders responding to the pandemic suggest the limits of our current understanding of public leadership. The traditional politics-administration dichotomy provides very little traction in explaining public leadership in governance structures that are “messy, disorganized, disconnected and unwieldy” and with significant power in informal networks (Abramson, 2021). The research utility of the political-administrative dichotomy breaks down in explaining the nearly 30 public health directors who resigned or were forced to resign in the USA in the first three months of the COVID-19 outbreak, as well as when administrators are not simply questioned but also threatened verbally and physically both by elected officials and the general public (Mello et al., 2020). Research has revealed that crises, whatever their origin, have the potential to transform “leaders into statesmen” when successfully handled or “obvious scapegoats” if it is not resolved and a return to normalcy is delayed or prevented altogether (Boin and ’t Hart, 2003, Guest editorial
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CiteScore
3.00
自引率
5.60%
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