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Resilient Leadership. Qualitative Study on Factors Influencing Organizational Resilience and Adaptive Response to Adversity
Author(s) -
Tudor Ţiclău,
AUTHOR_ID,
Cristina Hințea,
Constantin TROFIN,
AUTHOR_ID,
AUTHOR_ID
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
transylvanian review of administrative sciences
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.203
H-Index - 16
eISSN - 2247-8310
pISSN - 1842-2845
DOI - 10.24193/tras.si2021.7
Subject(s) - globe , psychological resilience , context (archaeology) , resilience (materials science) , absorptive capacity , public relations , political science , adaptive capacity , organizational culture , pandemic , covid-19 , business , social psychology , psychology , environmental resource management , marketing , economics , geography , ecology , archaeology , biology , climate change , thermodynamics , physics , neuroscience , pathology , medicine , disease , infectious disease (medical specialty)
Given the turbulent environment that govern­ments and citizens across the globe faced in the last two years (due to the COVID-19 pandemic), one concept seems to stand out as extremely valuable in this context: resilience. Resilience, understood as the capacity of a sys­tem to bounce back from adversity, becomes a key component in the equation of post-pandemic evo­lution and recovery. Resilient leadership is just one of the multiple derived applications of the general resilience concept, referring (in an institutional set­ting) to the capacity of leaders to turn out positive results despite adverse conditions. Based on quali­tative research consisting of 10 interviews conduct­ed with women leaders (from the private and non­profit sectors) during the last 18 months, our results show that governmental response (regulation and support) and financial pressures have been the ma­jor organizational challenges no matter the sector, while organizational dimension seems to have an influence on the capacity to adapt and respond to adversity. Gender does not seem to play a role in the response provided to the crisis.

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