Abstract

There has never been a historical moment more in need of dialogue between different perspectives, disciplines and identities than our own. As political, social, and cultural environments become ever more polarised, how do we best explore and understand the ways in which leaders and leadership operate for good or ill? This is a pressing concern for everyone affected by leaders’ actions and their consequences. However, even within the leadership studies research community, we generate our own schisms as academics and the practitioners who take note of their ideas align with one theoretical view over the other (or indeed condemn them all, as is often the case among critical leadership scholars).
We invite conference participants to explore what leadership looks like today, how it emerges historically, or how it can be enriched through conversation with different contexts, professions, or theoretical disciplines. Appreciating that leadership never appears by magic outside of particular situations, cultures or socio-historic moments, the theme offers the chance to explore the myriad possibilities offered by considering leadership in relation to other human and non/beyond human preoccupations and activities.
Contributions to the conference might include explorations of: • Leadership and social activism; • Leadership and the arts; • Leadership and institutions; • Leadership and systems; • Leadership and critical feminist or critical race theory; • Leadership and conflict; • Leadership and neoliberalism; • Leadership and violence; • Leadership and nature; • Leadership and the non- or beyond human; • Leadership for the social good or for individual flourishing
Contributions to this conference can take many forms: traditional academic paper presentations, panel discussions and debates, workshops, or more innovative dialogues. We will also be accepting submissions for interactive symposia sessions.
Keynote Speakers
Institutional support and place
Birmingham Business School is one of the UK’s largest and most diverse presences in management and leadership education and research. The School’s core work is supplemented by the Birmingham Leadership Institute, a stand-alone executive education unit founded in 2018. Both School and Institute are key components of the University of Birmingham, the UK’s first civic university, founded in 1900. The School is located on the university’s main 250 hectare campus around 3 miles from the city centre; the Institute occupies one of the city centre’s most prominent historic buildings there, a renovated co-operative bank. We also collaborate closely with colleagues based at the university’s campus in Dubai, founded in 2018.
The main campus in Birmingham is a welcoming green space with all of the facilities needed for major international conferences, including: a 185 room hotel with a range of meeting spaces, a campus railway station with frequent links to mainline stations, and a range of catering. The main School buildings are well equipped with conventional and Harvard lecture theatres and seminar rooms. Birmingham offers everything you would expect from a major city of around a million people. The city is globally renowned for its skilled craft community working in metal, its ethnic diversity, its centrality to the British industrial revolution, its support for the arts, and its hybrid food cultures.
The conference will open with workshops and a reception on
Donna Ladkin
Joanne Murphy
Christopher Pietroni
Scott Taylor
Carolyn Wilkins
