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Resilience Under Military Operational Stress: Can Leaders Influence Hardiness?
Author(s) -
Paul T. Bartone
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
military psychology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.396
H-Index - 43
eISSN - 1532-7876
pISSN - 0899-5605
DOI - 10.1207/s15327876mp1803s_10
Subject(s) - psychology , social psychology , transformational leadership , context (archaeology) , psychological resilience , hardiness (plants) , personality , paleontology , horticulture , cultivar , biology
Although many people suffer physical and mental health decrements following expo- sure to stress, many others show remarkable resilience, remaining healthy despite high stress levels. If the factors that account for resilience can be clearly identified and understood, perhaps resilience can be enhanced even for those most vulnerable to stress. One potential pathway to resilience is personality hardiness, a characteristic sense that life is meaningful, we choose our own futures, and change is interesting and valuable. This article applies this hardiness concept to the context of military op- erational stress, and argues that highly effective leaders can increase hardy, resilient responses to stressful circumstances within their units. I discuss the nature of stress in modern military operations, and briefly review relevant hardiness theory and re- search. Three sets of considerations lead to the proposition that hardy leaders can in- deed increase hardy cognitions and behaviors in groups. These considerations con- cern (a) the likely underlying mechanisms of hardiness, which have to do with how experiences get interpreted and made sense of; (b) relevant theoretical positions on leader social influence, including transformational leadership and path-goal leader theory; and (c) several empirical studies that have shown indirect support for a hardy leader influence process. A case vignette is provided to illustrate how leaders might increase hardy cognitions, attitudes, and behaviors within their organizations during highly stressful operations. This potential for leaders to boost hardiness as a pathway to resiliency in groups under stress merits further active investigation.

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