Post on 27-Apr-2022
Toward a unified "Theory Y" of leadership: Leader self-awareness, ethics and integrity as key attributes of positive leadership Vincent Giolito Over the last 15 years a profusion of "positive" leadership theories emerged. In part inspired by positive psychology, they also remind of McGregor (1960, 1966) "Theory Y" of management positing that leaders may attain economic performance while developing their subordinates toward self-development. Those constructs were empirically associated with favorable individual and collective outcomes. Yet the theories were developed in parallel, resulting in a lack of theoretical integration. Taking stock of research in the six major positive theories – servant, authentic, ethical, empowering, spiritual, and responsible leadership, this paper proposes an integrative framework of "Theory Y" leadership based on the overarching concept of leaders attributes that is, the representations that followers form of the qualities or virtues of their leaders. It argues that the attributes of leader self-awareness, ethical sense and integrity may synthesize the positive leadership theories. This integrative conceptualization of "Theory Y" leadership helps structure the theoretical field within the leadership studies and position leadership in the literature streams of positive organizational scholarship and positive organizational behavior. Theoretical propositions and avenues for research are offered, as well as implications for practice. Keywords: Servant leadership, authentic leadership, ethical leadership, empowering leadership, spiritual leadership, responsible leadership; Self-awareness; Ethical sense; Integrity; positive organizational scholarship
CEB Working Paper N° 15/043 October 2015
Université Libre de Bruxelles - Solvay Brussels School of Economics and Management
Centre Emile Bernheim ULB CP114/03 50, avenue F.D. Roosevelt 1050 Brussels BELGIUM
e-mail: ceb@admin.ulb.ac.be Tel.: +32 (0)2/650.48.64 Fax: +32 (0)2/650.41.88
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Vincent Giolito – vgiolito@ulb.ac.be
Toward a unified "Theory Y" of leadership:
Leader self-awareness, ethics and integrity as key attributes of positive leadership
Vincent Giolito - Solvay Brussels School of Economics & Management
ABSTRACT
Over the last 15 years a profusion of "positive" leadership theories emerged. In part inspired
by positive psychology, they also remind of McGregor (1960, 1966) "Theory Y" of
management positing that leaders may attain economic performance while developing their
subordinates toward self-development. Those constructs were empirically associated with
favorable individual and collective outcomes. Yet the theories were developed in parallel,
resulting in a lack of theoretical integration. Taking stock of research in the six major positive
theories – servant, authentic, ethical, empowering, spiritual, and responsible leadership, this
paper proposes an integrative framework of "Theory Y" leadership based on the overarching
concept of leaders attributes that is, the representations that followers form of the qualities or
virtues of their leaders. It argues that the attributes of leader self-awareness, ethical sense and
integrity may synthesize the positive leadership theories. This integrative conceptualization of
"Theory Y" leadership helps structure the theoretical field within the leadership studies and
position leadership in the literature streams of positive organizational scholarship and positive
organizational behavior. Theoretical propositions and avenues for research are offered, as
well as implications for practice.
Keywords: Servant leadership, authentic leadership, ethical leadership, empowering
leadership, spiritual leadership, responsible leadership; Self-awareness; Ethical sense;
Integrity; positive organizational scholarship
JEL Keywords: M00 Management - M510 Personnel Economics: Firm Employment
Decisions; Promotion - M140 Corporate culture
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Vincent Giolito – vgiolito@ulb.ac.be
Toward a unified "Theory Y" of leadership:
Leader self-awareness, ethics and integrity as key attributes of positive leadership
More than 50 years ago, McGregor (1960; 1966) enunciated his "Theory Y" of
management. He proposed that people are naturally willing to participate in organizational
efforts as part of their self-development and that the role of managers was to "recognize and
develop" subordinates' motivation, potential for development, and readiness in order to attain
organizational goals (McGregor; 1966: 12). He contrasted this proposition with a generalized
"Theory X", which held people for naturally self-interested and reluctant to work, and
assigned management a role of control and prodding. Over the last 15 years, with the term
"management" replaced by "leadership", a profusion of constructs of "good" or "positive"
leadership emerged that at least implicitly refer to Theory Y (Sorensen & Minahan, 2011).
The most prominent include servant leadership, authentic leadership, empowering leadership,
ethical leadership, spiritual leadership and responsible leadership, and are hereby referred to
as positive leadership theories (e.g., Brown & Treviño, 2006; Gardner, Cogliser, Davis, &
Dickens, 2011; Keller & Dansereau, 1995; Siegel, 2014; Seidman, 2004; van Dierendonck,
2011). The publications in peer-reviewed management journals (excluding sector-specific
publications) from 2000 to 2014 mentioning those theories in either their title, abstract or
keywords indicate a strong scholarly interest: 334 articles on authentic leadership, 383 on
servant leadership, 572 on ethical leadership for example. Some of those constructs have long
passed the stages of theory initiation and argumentation and entered the stage of empirical
verification (Reichers & Schneider, 1990). Half a century after passing away, McGregor
would have appreciated to see that leaders who score high on those variables indeed seem to
obtain favorable organizational outcomes, from job satisfaction and organizational citizenship
behavior to sales growth to return on equity (e.g., Liden, Wayne, Liao, & Meuser, 2013;
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Hunter et al., 2013; Walumbwa, Luthans, Avey, & Oke, 2011; Zhu, May, & Avolio, 2004).
Table 1 summarizes definitions, dimensions of the constructs and indicates the state of the
research.
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INSERT TABLE 1 ABOUT HERE
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For all the merits of their proponents however, the positive leadership theories leave
with the impression of a somewhat disorderly endeavor. Constructs frequently mix leader
behaviors, or what followers can directly observe in their leaders (e.g. listening, giving
feedback), with leaders attributes that is, what followers infer on their leaders' characteristics
such as conceptual skills or self-awareness (Liden et al., 2008; van Dierendonck & Nujiten,
2011; Walumbwa, Avolio, Gardner, Wernsing, & Peterson, 2008). From a broader
perspective, this profusion appears conducive to a risk of overlap, as researchers may tend to
remain in their respective "silos" (Okhuysen & Bonardi, 2011). To paraphrase Suddaby, could
it be that research in these separate streams makes the "same wine in different bottles"
(Suddaby, 2010: 352)? Attempts to structure those positive forms of leadership appear to fall
short. Proponents of positive organizational scholarship and positive organizational behaviors,
for example, have embraced a broad range of topics from interpersonal relationships to
strategic change and did not make leadership a common theme (Bakker & Schaufeli, 2008;
Cameron, Dutton, & Quinn, 2003; Cameron & Spreitzer, 2012). In any case, positive
leadership theorists remain apparently wary of tight affiliations with either of those streams.
Yet close, methodical cross-examination of the six positive leadership constructs as
they were operationalized indicates strong commonalities. It invites to suggest a combination
of three leaders attributes as pivotal toward a unified "Theory Y" of leadership. The first
attribute is self-awareness that is, the reflexive knowledge someone has of their own strengths
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and weaknesses, from competencies to skills to emotional tendencies and identity features
(Church, 1997; Taylor, 2010). Second comes ethical sense, or the personal consciousness of
what is good and bad (Ciulla, 1995). The third attribute is integrity or the capacity to act in
accordance with one's thoughts and words (Palanski & Yammarino, 2007; Simons, 2002).
The purpose of this article is to threefold: a) to offer a synthetic view of the most
important leadership constructs that explicitly or most often implicitly hinge on McGregor's
Theory Y postulate (for an explicit reference see Gardner & Schermerhorn, 2004); b) building
on the similarities between those constructs, to propose that self-awareness, integrity and
ethics may define "Theory Y" leaders; c) to suggest that future research on related constructs
include a clear delineation between leaders' attributes and specific behaviors. In so doing I
attempt to clarify what may be called "good" or "positive" leadership within the broad field of
leadership studies (Bass & Bass, 2008). This paper should contribute to reinforce the structure
of the streams of positive organizational scholarship and positive organizational behavior
(Bakker & Schaufeli, 2008; Cameron, Dutton, & Quinn, 2003; Cameron & Spreitzer, 2012).
In addition, it should help scholars in the mentioned constructs to better position their
research relatively to other constructs and in the broader perspective what may be termed
"Theory Y" leadership. The next brief section delimitates the scope and bases of our
propositions. A brief overview of each of the constructs studied will follow. Then the paper
identifies main commonalities in terms of leaders' attributes and presents some avenues for
future research and new opportunities for practitioners.
SIX POSITIVE LEADERSHIP THEORIES
My propositions are based on a systematic review of the literature in positive
leadership theories over the period from 2000 to 2015 (LePine & King, 2010). Table 2
displays the main similarities (above the diagonal of the table, right-hand side) and
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differences, attempting to delineate leader behaviors from leader attributes (below the
diagonal, left-hand side of the table).
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INSERT TABLE 2 ABOUT HERE
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Criteria for inclusion in the review
This paper is based on an examination of six specific leadership constructs that
emerged as important in the managerial literature since the turn of the century: servant
leadership (Greenleaf, 1970), authentic leadership (Avolio, Luthans, & Walumbwa, 2004),
ethical leadership (Seidman, 2004), empowering leadership (Keller & Dansereau, 1995),
spiritual leadership (Fry, 2003) and responsible leadership (Stahl & Sully de Luque, 2014).
Criteria for inclusion were: the construct demonstrates a clear intent of "doing good" for
either or both the people within the organization and the society outside, evoking a
prescriptive approach; it is presented with theoretical, not only empirical bases; it is
sufficiently developed to include not only propositions and definitions, but at least a
delineation of dimensions, and ideally operationalized instruments for empirical
measurements. Finally, a count of the mentions in peer-reviewed management journals over
the years 2000-2014 helped exclude a few theories. Based on these cumulative criteria, I
excluded three widely researched constructs. The first one is transformational leadership
(Bass & Steidlmeier, 1999). Despite its prominence in the literature, it is strongly associated
with the charismatic view of leadership and its proponents insisted on its beneficial impact on
people and society only incidentally (Bass & Bass, 2008). Second, leader-member exchange
or LMX is not included either, notably because of its main focus on the way leaders
differentiate their relationships with individual followers (Dulebohn, Bommer, Liden, Brouer,
& Ferris, 2011). Lastly, appreciative inquiry was excluded because it is presented more as a
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pragmatic method for change than a theory-based leadership construct per se (Cooperrider &
Whitney, 1999; Cooperrider & Goodwin, 2012). Too scarce mentions in the literature
precluded the consideration of a few other constructs such as moral leadership and positive
leadership (e.g. Becker, 2007; Gini, 1997; Cameron, 2008).
Common assumptions
The propositions I derive from the six constructs under study in this paper share a
number of basic assumptions. First, leadership is conceived of as the influence a leader has on
their followers above and beyond their formal, legal powers, toward organizational goals,
specifically in the perspective of some organizational change (Bass & Bass, 2008). Yet the
leader all six positive theories focus on is generally a manager that is, a person formally
legally endowed with some powers linked to collective objectives on behalf of their
organization – essentially a for-profit company. Our concern is not emergent leadership, or
the factors conducive for a person to being accepted as a leader (Bass & Bass, 2008). Second,
my propositions and the constructs I refer to parallel the opposition exposed by McGregor
(1960) between theories X and Y: in the same way McGregor invited managers to achieve
economic objectives while developing their subordinates, this paper builds on the idea that
leaders' positive features are a avenue, if not a means, to attain organizational goals. Third, the
six positive leadership theories I build on are construed based on the assessment of the leaders
by their followers. This leaves aside alternative ways of assessment, for example by the
leader's leader, other stakeholders, or in reference to some objective bases of comparison such
as the "Big Five" psychological traits (e.g. Barrick & Mount, 1991).
OVERVIEW OF SIX POSITIVE LEADERSHIP THEORIES
AND SPECIFIC LEADER ATTRIBUTES
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The brief section below focuses on the distinctive features of the six positive
leadership theories I retained based on construct definitions and their respective specific
components in terms of leaders attributes.
Servant leadership. Robert Greenleaf, then an executive in a large US company, introduced
the paradoxical idea of "the servant as leader" based on his own experience (1970: 1), with
this definition:
"The best test [of being a servant leader], and difficult to administer, is: do
those served [i.e. followers] grow as persons? Do they, while being served,
become healthier, wiser, freer, more autonomous, more likely themselves to
become servants?" (Greenleaf, 1970: 7)
Laub (2004: 8) defined servant leadership as "an understanding and practice of
leadership that places the good of those led over the self-interest of the leader". In his
comprehensive review, van Dierendonck (2011: 1231) summarized that servant-leaders work
"toward building a learning organization where each individual can be of unique value".
Based on how the construct was operationalized, servant leadership distinguishes itself by
several attributes, among which the personal sense of being a servant; professional conceptual
skills, courage and humility (Liden et al., 2008; van Dierendonck & Nujiten, 2011).
Authentic leadership. Practitioners popularized the term authentic leadership before and
shortly after the turn of the century (e.g George, 2003; George, George, & Sims, 2007; Terry,
1993). Scholars followed suit in the early 2000s. Authenticity in leadership was conceived of
as a "leader's moral capacity to align responsibilities of the self, to the followers, and to the
public in efforts to sustain cooperative efforts within and outside of the organization"
(Novicevic, Harvey, Ronald, & Brown-Radford, 2006). Luthans and Avolio refer to authentic
leadership as owning one's personal experience and acting in accord with one's true self, and
elicits behaviors such as giving priority to developing associates (Luthans & Avolio, 2003). A
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specific component of authentic leadership is a broad concept of self-awareness: authentic
leaders have a good understanding and potentially control of their identities, goals,
competencies and weaknesses (Gardner, Avolio, Luthans, May, & Walumbwa, 2005;
Walumba et al., 2008).
Empowering leadership. Employee empowerment has grown in popularity from the years
1990s (Arnold, Arad, Rhoades, & Drasgow, 2000; Forrester, 2000). Empowerment refers to
managerial practices that evoke for workers an "active, rather than a passive orientation to a
work role" based on four cognitions: meaning, competence, self-determination and impact
(Spreitzer, 1995: 1444; Conger & Kanungo, 1998). Empowering leaders were described as
"negotiating latitude" with followers and supporting them for "self-worth" (Keller &
Dansereau, 1995: 129). In that respect empowering leadership directly opposes "theory X"
and pragmatically embraces "theory Y" assumptions (McGregor, 1960; 1966). Specifically, it
features leading by example (Arnold, et al., 2000).
Ethical leadership. Ethical leadership was defined as "the demonstration of normatively
appropriate conduct through personal actions and interpersonal relationships, and the
promotion of such conduct to followers through two-way communication, reinforcement, and
decision-making" (Brown, Treviño, & Harrison, 2005; Brown & Treviño, 2006: 595). Based
on prior theorization, seven dimensions were identified by Kalshoven, Den Hartog and De
Hoogh (2011): fairness, integrity, ethical guidance, people orientation, power sharing, role
clarification, and concern for sustainability. As in constructs mentioned above, and although
the authors proposed to focus on leader behaviors, their operationalization combines actual
behaviors (e.g. the leader provides me with ethical guidance) and attributes (e.g. the leader is
perceived as possessing fairness).
Spiritual leadership. Fry construed spiritual leadership as based on the values and attitudes
necessary to generate intrinsic motivation with oneself and others toward "a sense of spiritual
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survival through calling and membership" (Fry, 2003: 693; Fry, Matherly, Whittington, &
Winston, 2007). Distinctive components of spiritual leadership are an inspired vision or
mission for themselves and their organization; a sense of altruistic love and hope guided by
personal faith. Although no reference is made to a specific faith, spiritual leadership appears
impregnated by Christian tradition rather than other forms of spirituality.
Responsible leadership. A first definition presented responsible leaders as tasked with
"weaving a web of inclusion where the leader engages himself among equals" (Maak & Pless,
2006: 104). Leaders and their stakeholders, from employees to customers to shareholders to
the society at large, "are connected through a shared sense of meaning and purpose through
which they raise one another to higher levels of motivation and commitment for achieving
sustainable values creation and social change" (Pless, 2007: 438). More recently, responsible
leadership has been presented as "intentional actions taken by leaders to benefit the
stakeholders of the company and/or actions taken to avoid harmful consequences for
corporate stakeholders and the larger society" (Stahl & Sully de Luque, 2014: 238), in a "do
good-do no harm" approach (Siegel, 2014; Waldman & Balven, 2014: 226). Based on the
only operationalization available, what makes responsible leaders different is the diversity of
stakeholders they pay attention to, from employees and trade unions to customers to local
communities to NGOs and the society at large (Vögtlin, 2011).
COMMON "THEORY Y" LEADER ATTRIBUTES
I propose that it is possible to coalesce a unified "Theory Y" leadership based on the
attributes followers ascribe to their leaders. Theoretical developments in the six positive
leadership reviewed lead to isolate three specific attributes that are compatible with
McGregor's insights: leader's self-awareness, ethical sense, and integrity.
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Self-awareness
What is leader self-awareness? Self-awareness refers to the reflexive knowledge and
acceptance of one's personal and specific characteristics (Church, 1997). For example, as
Kernis notes (2003: 13), "it includes, but is not limited to, being aware of one’s strengths and
weaknesses, trait characteristics, and emotions". Self-awareness can be measured both by
breadth and depth. Breadth means the range of specificities leaders are aware of, from
professional competencies and talents to typical preferences and emotional reactions in given
situations to organizational artifacts they feel as psychological owners (Avey, Avolio,
Crossley, & Luthans, 2009). Self-awareness naturally includes one's weaknesses and
shortcomings (Diddams & Chang, 2012). It extends to a broader sense of identity, where
leaders can easily express their values, preferences, ambitions and strivings both at the
individual and collective levels. Depth of self-awareness refers to how leaders make sense of
those characteristics based on their own history, from their upbringing to their career path. It
implies that leaders are able to deal with their prior failures as well as current and past inner
contradictions and potential multiple possible selves (Ilies, Morgenson, & Nahrgang, 2005;
Kernis & Goldman, 2006; Markus & Nurius, 1987). Self-awareness is not fixed at one point
in time. Rather, it evokes a continuous development process in which leaders constantly
update and adjust their understanding and trust in their talents, motives and purposes and
measure their potential and actual reactions in a dynamic environment, both by self-reflection
and in the exchanges with others (Avolio & Gardner, 2005; Goffee & Jones, 2009).
Where is self-awareness in the six positive theories? With abundant reference to the works of
Kernis (2003), the proponents of the authentic leadership theory have made self-awareness a
key component of their construct (Avolio & Gardner, 2005). Gardner & Schermerhorn (2004)
highlight the need of knowledge of one's emotions, values and beliefs. Shamir and Eilam
(2005) insist that authentic leaders achieve a high level of self-clarity, with strongly held
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values and convictions. It may be argued that self-awareness is an underlying condition of the
other theories studied. Servant leadership and spiritual leadership are cases in point.
Regarding servant leadership, "it begins with the natural feeling that one wants to serve, to
serve first. Then conscious choice brings one to aspire to lead" (Greenleaf, 1970: 27). The
sense of personal calling and membership, the faith and the altruistic love that are key to
spiritual leadership seem to necessarily imply a strong self-awareness, if perhaps less
sensitive to the potential contradictions in the spiritual leader's inspiration (Fry, 2003).
Because ethical leaders are presented as "principled decision-makers" (Brown & Treviño,
2006: 597) who practice role clarification with their followers (Kalshoven, den Hartog, & de
Hoogh, 2011), they must have a good understanding of their own values and competencies
respectively. The informing and coaching dimensions in empowering leadership also imply
that leaders are deeply aware of their personal position, at least relatively to their followers
(Arnold et al., 2000). Lastly, in responsible leadership theory, leaders are supposed to feel
personally accountable of their own and their organization's actions toward various
stakeholders (Doh & Quigley, 2005; Pless & Maak, 2011; Stahl & Sully de Luque, 2014).
This necessitates a thorough consciousness of their personal role, aspirations and potential
liabilities in the society at large.
How is self-awareness linked to performance and followers' growth? First, leaders
themselves benefit from self-awareness in several respects. More self-aware leaders are
keener to enjoy optimal self-esteem that is, a sense of their worth that is not dependent on
exogenous conditions such as positive feedback or good performance (Heppner & Kernis,
2008; Kernis, 2003). For example, they may be more perseverant and resilient in the face of
potential adverse conditions. It has been proposed that personal self-awareness also helps
leaders understand and appreciate the needs of others, be they team members or external
stakeholders (Taylor, 2010). Self-awareness appears to be crucial, too, to leaders' personal
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identification with their role and their organization (Albert, Ashforth, & Dutton, 2000). Role
and organizational identification have been shown to be predictors of performance (Yoshida,
Sendjaya, Hirst & Cooper, 2014). Moreover, self-awareness should be a determinant of
intrinsic motivation, according to self-determination theory. As described by Ryan and Deci
(2000), intrinsic motivation hinges on competency, autonomy and relatedness. It may be
argued that only leaders who are deeply aware of their needs in those three dimensions are
able to design their role relatively to their followers and, to a certain extent, relatively to their
peers and supervisors. For example, in a business negotiation, a leader who knows she has a
strong people orientation may devote her efforts to deepen the relationship with partners
while assigning her more task-oriented colleagues the processing of the actual details of the
deal. In addition, because self-awareness helps leaders overcome their self-overestimation
bias, it helps them predict more accurately their results and avoid deception (e.g. Dunning,
2005). An empirical study has showed that more self-aware leaders tend to obtain better
performance and to be more effective change leaders (Church, 1997; Higgs & Rowlands,
2010).
Second, as proposed by social learning theory (Bandura, 1977), followers tend to
model their attitudes and behaviors on those of their leaders. Transposed in an integrative
"Theory Y" theory of leadership, it implies that followers of self-aware leaders in turn gain a
better ownership of their own competencies, values, and aspirations relatively to those of their
organizations and environment. Provided they feel a personal alignment, they should tend to
more readily adopt behaviors that benefit their leaders, coworkers and other stakeholders
(servant leadership: Liden et al., 2008; responsible leadership: Pless, 2007; Pless & Maak,
2011), show concern for others and foster power sharing and participative decision-making
(ethical leadership: Kalshoven & al., 2011; empowering leadership: Arnold et al., 2000) and
create a sense of membership (spiritual leadership: Fry, 2003).
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Proposition 1. Leader self-awareness is central to "Theory Y" leadership. More as
opposed to less self-aware leaders experience a higher level of alignment of their own
objectives and those of their organizations and are more able to negotiate to the
benefit of all stakeholders. By modeling their attitudes on those of more self-aware
leaders, followers become themselves more self-aware, thus favoring the attainment of
better outcomes at the individual, team, organizational, and societal levels.
Ethical sense
What is leader ethical sense? Ethics is "the examination of right, wrong, good, evil, virtue ...
etc. in human relationships with each other and other living things" reminds Ciulla (2004: 4;
Sutcliffe, 2005). In that respect ethical sense means the consciousness of what is good and
what is bad (Aronson, 2001). While self-awareness helps leaders determine their behavior by
reference to internal principles, ethical sense appeals to external frames of reference. Those
may be universal values, such as giving precedence to love over hatred, expressed in the
traditional wisdom of "treating people as we would like to be treated" (Seidman, 2004: 135).
The reference may also be more specific codes of appropriate conduct more or less
imperatively ordered by common moral, philosophical, religious or cultural values (Becker,
2007). A strong sense of ethics should privilege virtues over vice, fairness over unfairness and
respect over disrespect. As ethics fundamentally concerns the effects of one's actions on other
people (Aronson, 2001:135), it should also invite leaders to pay specific attention to how their
attitudes and decisions might hurt the most fragile or deprived among their stakeholders.
Ethical sense is not limited to the immediate impact of the leader's actions. Rather, the
consciousness it implies extends to more remote elements such as medium- to long-term
consequences, for example the efficacy and safety of a company's products for customers
(Seidman, 2004). To the extent that doing good concerns not only people, but also the natural
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environment and the society at large, ethical sense connotes strongly with corporate social
responsibility (Aronson, 2001).
Yet the mere consciousness by leaders of their ethical values is not sufficient, as
values frequently conflict in the effective practice of leadership. The simplest example may be
found in the decision to lay off an employee whose behavior becomes incompatible with his
assignments, as both alternatives have negative consequences, that is do harm, not good to
others (Marsh, 2012). In reality, the leader's sense of ethics manifests itself more as a process
in which leaders are cognizant of the positive or negative ethical quality of the full range of
choices they may make (May, Chan, Hodges, & Avolio, 2004). The process they follow in
those "ethical dilemmas" is one where they are able to figure out the set of values, weigh their
alternatives against those values and make the conscious choice to act in accord with the
values they judge most appropriate (May et al., 2004).
Where is the leader's ethical senses in the six positive theories? Naturally the conscience of
what is right and wrong is central to the theory of ethical leadership, defined as the
observance of "normatively appropriate conduct" in Brown and Treviño's comprehensive
review (2006: 595). It translates in attributes of fairness and concern for sustainability, for
example (Kalshoven et al., 2011). Proponents of authentic leadership include in the definition
of their construct an internalized moral perspective that they define as an integrated and
internalized form of self-regulation guided by internal moral standards versus group,
organizational and societal pressures (Walumbwa, et al., 2008). The sense of ethics is also
manifest in the servant leaders' virtuous attributes of forgiveness and humility, and their
preoccupation with the community and the most deprived (Greenleaf, 1970; Liden et al.,
2008; Spears, 2002; van Dierendonck & Nujiten, 2011). Ethics are not absent from
empowering leadership insofar as empowerment proactively supports the employees' self-
worth and removes conditions that foster their potential sense of powerlessness in the
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organization (Keller & Dansereau, 1995; Arnold et al., 2000). In spiritual leadership theory,
spiritual values – specifically altruistic love – are supposed to form the base of the collective
engagement around the leader toward the organizational vision and mission. Finally,
responsible leaders are presented as actively inquiring in the potential results of their actions
on other stakeholders, and avoid those that may have harmful consequences of which they
would feel themselves accountable for (Doh & Quigley, 2014; Maak & Pless, 2006; Stahl &
Sully de Luque, 2014).
How does the leader's sense of ethics impact performance and followers' self-growth? At
least two mechanisms are at play. First, if a subjective basic sense of right and wrong is self-
evident for anyone, the situations a leader has to deal with necessarily entails complex choices,
were it only regarding the possibly unethical means required to attain ethically correct ends
(Price, 2003; Palmer, 2009). Moreover, "leaders may well come to believe … that they are not
bound by the requirements of morality" (Price, 2003: 69). Overcoming those difficulties in
ethical discernment implies that leaders possess personal qualities that set them apart from
followers. Such leaders are seen as demonstrating courage, humility, fairness and hope
(servant leadership: van Dierendonck & Nujiten, 2011; ethical leadership: Kalshoven et al.,
2011). Those characteristics are almost universally recognized as virtues (Peterson &
Seligman, 2004; Dahlsgaard, Peterson, & Seligman, 2005). Morality serves as a crucial test
for legitimacy, as people are more prone to respect others when they demonstrate moral
qualities they ascribe to themselves, argue Skitka, Bauman and Lytle (2008). So a leader high
in ethical sense can expect more alignment from his followers at the interpersonal level. At
the team or organizational levels, ethical sense, for example manifested in the attribute of
leader fairness, is conducive to trust: followers have confidence that their leader will not
exploit their potential vulnerabilities (Sabell, 1993, quoted by Barney & Hanson, 1994). And
numerous studies have demonstrated the positive association between trust and various
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favorable organizational outcomes (e.g. Barney & Hansen, 1994; Clapp-Smith, Vogelsgang,
& Avey, 2008; Norman, Avolio, & Luthans, 2010; Schaubroeck, Lam, & Peng, 2011).
Second, a strong sense of ethics induces "Theory Y" leaders to specific behaviors that
followers perceive as good deeds towards them. Examples are listening and taking
information into account (authentic leadership: Walumbwa et al., 2008), listening, caring and
helping, (servant leadership: Liden et al., 2008; van Dierendonck, 2011; Spears, 2002),
coaching and allowing for participation in decision making (empowering leadership: Arnold
et al., 2000), love (spiritual leadership: Fry, 2005) or entertaining a proactive dialogue about
stakeholders' needs (responsible leadership: Doh & Quigley, 2014). Social exchange theory
posits that followers in organizations tend to reciprocate what they appreciate from others,
more specifically supervisors (Blau, 1964). So, followers are more inclined to align
themselves with the objectives of leaders who manifest such positive behaviors. Specific
effects can also be expected as caring and coaching leaders may well foster positive emotions
in followers. Besides partially offsetting negative emotions, positive emotions allow people to
broaden their cognitive and behavioral repertoire and build on new perspectives, thus
developing their potential (Fredrickson, 1998; Fredrickson & Branigan, 2005). Research has
shown, for example, that positive emotions improve creativity in problem-solving (Isen,
Daubman, & Nowicki, 1987).
Proposition 2. A high sense of ethics is crucial to "Theory Y" leadership, so that
leaders with a higher sense of ethics will experience a stronger alignment from their
followers toward organizational objectives, and the self-growth of followers will be
enhanced.
Integrity
What is integrity? Although frequently cited in normative leadership studies as well as
practitioner accounts, integrity has been singled out as a problematic concept, often confused
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with close constructs such as authenticity, honesty, justice, conscientiousness, and ethics or
morality (Palanski & Yammarino, 2007). Yet relatively recently, leader integrity has received
a practical scholarly definition. It refers to one's consistency between words and actions
(Palanski & Yammarino, 2007; Simmons, 2002). Leaders with integrity "represent themselves
accurately in their communications with employees" (Simmons, 2002: 19). Integrity is by
demonstrated by "walking the talk", as the saying goes. Leaders high in integrity keep
promises and follow through their commitments (Davis & Rothstein, 2006). This consistency
must extend over time, as followers compare current leader actions with prior discourse. It
must also hold with a variety of stakeholders and across situations, particularly in the face of
adverse circumstances. As a result, leaders high in integrity manifest what may be perceived
as a) endurance or perseverance; b) fairness, because they apply the same principle with all
constituents; c) courage, because they persist in their actions regardless of the difficulties.
By proposing that leader integrity must complement self-awareness and ethical sense,
I follow Palanski and Yammarino, who present integrity as an "adjunctive" virtue in their
clarification of integrity as a leadership construct (2007: 408). That is, integrity per se may
not determine how "Theory Y" leaders enhance their influence. It only does so by
complementing the attributes of self-awareness and sense of ethics. In effect, integrity bridges
the gap between the psychological specificities of a leader and his or her actual attitudes,
decisions and actions. Integrity combined with self-awareness results in authenticity. Leaders
follow the ancient Greek and Shakespearian maxim "To thine own self be true" (Avolio &
Gardner, 2005; Gardner et al., 2005): owners of their identity, they act in accordance with
their true selves (Harter, 2002). Integrity combined with a strong ethical sense translates into
the actual attributes fairness, justice or trustworthiness that followers will ascribe to leaders
when assessing their credibility and legitimacy (Davis & Rothstein, 2006; Palanski &
Yammarino, 2007).
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I insist that integrity must complement self-awareness and sense of ethics
simultaneously. The combination of only self-awareness and integrity is not sufficient to
produce "Theory Y" leadership, as a leader high in his self-awareness of needing domination
and power might use of means contrary to basic human rights – it was the basis for the
strongest criticisms to both transformational and authentic leadership theories (Algera & Lips-
Werma, 2011; Bass & Steidlmeier, 1999). Accordingly, the combination of integrity and
sense of ethics alone would confer leaders the image of a depersonalized individuals applying
moral rules without involving their identities, like a monk, or perhaps a robot (Alvesson &
Spicer, 2011).
Where is leader integrity in the six positive theories? Because all the leadership theories I
studied mix attributes and behaviors, at least in their operationalized constructs as shown in
table 1, they implicitly refer to integrity more or less explicitly. Specifically, most authentic
leadership proponents insisted on the consistency between self-awareness and behavior
(Gardner et al., 2005; Ilies et al., 2005; Algera & Lips-Werma, 2011). The construct
comprises of behaviors – transparent communication and balanced information processing –
that concretely transpose self-awareness and ethical perspective. Regarding servant leadership,
of the two operationalized constructs available, one focuses on behaviors and the other on
attributes, and they demonstrate strong correlations, which implies that servant leaders
effectively act upon their espoused values (Liden et al., 2008; Liden et al., 2015; van
Dierendonck & Nujiten, 2011). Integrity is singled out as a particular dimension of ethical
leadership and ethical leaders are presented as sharing power and being able to provide ethical
guidance (Kalshoven et al., 2011),. Though integrity appears less self-evident in empowering
leadership, it is manifested in leading by example that is, acting in consistency with proffered
principles. By inviting leaders to create a culture "whereby leaders have genuine care and
appreciation for both self and others", spiritual leadership, too, seems to compel them to a
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high degree of integrity (Fry, 2003: 695). Lastly, responsible leadership focuses not only on
the leader's cognitive concern for a variety of constituents, but also on actions that serve their
needs and avoid harmful consequences for the society at large (Stahl & Sully de Luque, 2014).
How does leader integrity foster organizational performance and followers' self-growth?
As followers judge their leaders based on their actions, and particularly those actions that
have an impact upon them, leader integrity removes the obstacles that may stand in the way of
the positive outcomes of the assessment of leaders as both self-aware and endowed with
strong ethical sense. For example, leaders who follow through may indeed be judged as fair
and equitable, thus generating interpersonal trust and, in turn, positive emotions and their
favorable consequences. By leading by example, they may influence followers individually
and develop a culture of organizational trust and fairness through social learning (Bandura,
1977). Initial research on authentic leadership had actually shown how important it is for
middle managers, themselves leaders and followers at the same time, not to be "fake"
(Endrissat, Müller, & Kaudela-Baum, 2007; Shamir & Eilam, 2005). The mechanisms by
which integrity operates toward both organizational objectives and followers' self-growth are
possibly most vividly demonstrated when integrity is absent. Inside the organization, people
observe the congruence between what leaders assert, for examples team or corporate values,
and the way they act in their daily duties. Occasional incongruence may be tolerated, but
repetition induces followers to ascribe an attribute of hypocrisy to the leader, and in turn
experience personal feelings of disenchantment, "a blend of disappointment and anger" (Cha
& Edmondson, 2006: 71). As trust disappears, followers are more likely to restrain their
commitment and effort toward organizational goals. Ultimately, they may feel that the leader
and the organization violated the psychological contract of which the ethical element was a
part (Rousseau, 2001; Zhao, Wayne, Glibkowski, & Bravo, 2007). The same reasoning
applies to leaders vis-à-vis other stakeholders. As noted by responsible leadership proponents,
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leaders who fail on the accounts of accountability and dependability on behalf of their
organization may induce disastrous consequences in terms of value destruction or reputation
loss (Cameron, 2011; Pless & Maak, 2011).
Proposition 3. Integrity, or alignment of words and actions, is crucial to "Theory Y"
leadership so that leaders high in integrity are more likely to benefit from a better
alignment from their followers toward organizational objectives; and the self-growth
of their followers is more likely to be enhanced.
Proposition 4. Integrity implies the simultaneous combination into actions of leader
self-awareness and sense of ethics, so that only leaders who are judged high on those
two attributes based on their behaviors and actions will be assessed as "Theory Y"
leaders, and their leadership will be positively associated with favorable outcomes for
followers and organizations.
IMPLICATIONS FOR THE FUTURE
A fundamental assumption of the developments above is that followers' attributions of
leaders are pivotal in determining the effectiveness of leadership influence. Attributions, "a
causal ascription for a positive or negative outcome" (Martinko, Harvey, & Douglas, 2007:
562), are heuristics that is, cognitive schemata that facilitate the understanding of a complex
reality (Tversky & Kahnemann, 1973). Over time, attributes are more likely to exert the
influence of a leader than his or her discrete behaviors. People form those heuristics about
their leaders and make sense based on them. As those heuristics refer to some broader frame
of reference, specifically, virtues (Dahlsgaard, Peterson, & Seligman, 2005), people not only
adjust their own behavior on them in the daily negotiation episodes of their working lives, but
also, as people share information and opinions about leaders' attributes in the larger
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conversation of the workplace, they participate to building the organizational culture (Toor &
Ofori, 2009).
Avenues for research
The primary avenue for further research is naturally to better delineate virtuous
attributes from behaviors. A first endeavor may be to elaborate instruments to measure leader
attributes, building on the scales developed for leader integrity such as the Perceived leader
integrity scale (Craig & Gustafson, 1998), the items pertaining to leader self-awareness in the
authentic leadership scale (Walumbwa et al., 2008) and, with respect to the ethical sense
attribute, the ethical leadership scale (Brown & Treviño, 2002; Kalshoven et al., 2008) and
the ethical dimensions in servant leadership, authentic leadership and spiritual leadership.
This effort will be made easier as there exists a strong stream of theoretical developments
regarding the three virtuous attributes in various literatures from leadership studies to positive
psychology to philosophy (e.g. Dahlsgaard, Peterson, & Seligman, 2005).
A second type of endeavor is needed to map out those attributes with reference to
behaviors or, put in another way, to explain how followers infer attributes from the
observation of their leaders. Regarding leader integrity, as consistency over time is a crucial
element, longitudinal or at least time-lagged studies may help. Yet how do people come to
assess their leader as self-aware or endowed with ethical sense? What actions, what attitudes
are more likely to drive or, conversely, to preclude such judgments? Research in that direction
may be illuminated both by extant studies on the six theories, but also complementarily by
scholarly studies on the "dark side of leadership", despotic leadership and abusive leadership
(ref.needed). In that effort for mapping out the three virtuous attributes of "Theory Y"
leadership, an important light may be shed by reference to other, very distinct attributes such
as professional competence (Ciulla, 1995).
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While abundant empirical research has shown favorable outcomes of the six theories I
gathered under the umbrella of "Theory Y" leadership, surprisingly little attention has been
paid to their antecedents. This may be a third avenue for further research. What personal
characteristics make a leader more likely to be perceived as self-aware and high in ethical
sense and integrity remains by and large an unexplored area. For sure, theorists of authentic
leadership suggested that "trigger events", be they positive or negative, may be conducive to
authenticity, and one author argued that perceived authenticity was more easily attained by
male than female leaders (Avolio, Gardner, Walumbwa, Luthans, & May, 2004; Eagly, 2005;
Puente, Crous, & Venter, 2007). Empirically, a positive association was found between
perceptions of servant leadership and the status the founder of the company (Peterson, Galvin,
& Lange, 2012). Yet those examples remain too few and far apart. Because attributes may be
assumed to be close to traits that is, stable over time, what remains to comprehend, for
example, is whether there are correlates with measured universal psychological traits such as
the so-called Big Five – extraversion, agreeableness, openness, conscientiousness, and
neuroticism (Barrick & Mount, 1991). In a developmental perspective, narrative approaches
would help understand what personal and professional experiences leaders who are perceived
high on our three positive attributes built on and how they make sense of their professional
identities (Shamir & Eilam, 2005; Driscoll & McKee, 2007).
Finally, further studies are warranted regarding boundary conditions. Research so far
has focused on organizations with a strong formal structure essentially in the for-profit world
of corporations, as emerges both from empirical studies and underlying assumptions of the
theoretical development. The three "Theory Y" leadership attributes may be sought in
different contexts such as early entrepreneurial ventures, nonprofit and hybrid organizations.
The six leadership theories on which I based my propositions have to a certain extent proven
culture-proof in the sense that constructs have shown to be theoretically consistent with major
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philosophical currents, and close empirical results have been observed in various parts of the
world (e.g. Bobbio, van Dierendonck, & Manganelli, 2012; Liden et al., 2015; Mittal &
Dorfman, 2012; Pekerti & Sendjaya, 2010; Walumbwa, Hartnell, & Oke, 2010; Walumbwa et
al., 2008). However, what remains to know is how robust "Theory Y" attributes are with
respect to organizational cultures. It might be, for example, that self-awareness, ethical sense
and integrity are more salient in organizations where the culture is more benevolent, more
humane, and less salient in bureaucratic cultures. Moreover, whilst most empirical work on
positive leadership was done at the individual and team levels, with employees assessing the
characteristics of their direct supervisor, using a multilevel lens would help make headway
building on existing attempts in that direction (e.g. Palanski & Yammarino, 2009; Vögtlin,
Patzer, & Scherer, 2011; Yammarino, Dionne, Schriesheim, & Dansereau, 2008; Yoshida,
Sendjaya, Hirst, & Cooper, 2014). Specifically, more effort seems warranted to extend prior
findings to the organizational level (e.g. Peterson, Galvin, & Lange, 2012). While popular
business literature tends to associate self-servingly some positive CEO characteristics with
successful outcomes, insights might be gained by testing relationships between the three
fundamental virtuous attributes and organizational performance. Because in typical
organizations, most employees are not able to directly observe CEO behaviors, the three
simple attributes I propose may constitute efficient variables to measure the actual influence
of the top management and unveil some of its mechanisms.
Implications for practice
Because authentic, servant, ethical, empowering, spiritual and responsible leadership
theories have been shown to have positive impact both on performance and the individual
wellbeing of employees, synthetizing their findings in the three "Theory Y" leadership
attributes should have important implication for performance-oriented organizations with
respect to managers' selection, development and collaborative practices. Selection refers to
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hiring as well as promoting. The attributes of self-awareness, ethical sense and integrity are
more easily observable and verifiable than more elaborate constructs. In the hiring process,
they can be verified with referrals. In the promotion and succession planning process, HR
practitioners can assess them for a specific individual by means of interviews, questionnaires
and, with more accuracy and consistency, 360-degree assessments. Depth can be added by
asking individuals and referrals about specific practices that signal the three attributes. For
example, self-awareness is fostered by self-reflection. Recruiters may ask what self-reflection
practices candidates engage in. Regarding ethics and integrity, supervisors may consider
whether applicants for a promotion have had their behavior reported by whistleblowers.
Training and coaching, on the other hand, may be tools for leadership development if
designed toward the three "Theory Y" leadership attributes. Because the "only learning which
significantly influences behavior is self-discovered, self-appropriated learning" (Schön, 1983),
coaching appears a crucial instrument to develop self-awareness and integrity. Coaching helps
clients reflect on their actions and their relationship with their various constituents, draw
conclusions and, if need be, engage in alterations of their behaviors. Training too may infuse
managers with new habits fostering self-reflection, such as journaling. It is debatable how
effective training can be regarding the development of ethical sense, particularly since ethics
are held to be highly personal and people tend to think everyone share their subjective ethical
perceptions (Skitka, Bauman, & Lytle, 2008). But while this may be true about grand societal
issues, it is more easily conceivable that organizations can develop their staff's ethical sense
relatively to their specific organizational codes of conduct, for example.
CONCLUSION
This paper aimed to take stock of the important findings brought about in the last
fifteen years by six theories of leadership that share the basic assumptions of McGregor's
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1960; 1966) "Theory Y" and the positive approach advocated by positive organizational
scholarship and positive organizational scholarship (Cameron, Dutton, & Quinn, 2003;
Cameron & Spreitzer, 2012; Bakker & Schaufeli, 2008). It specifically attempted at
synthesizing the abundant literature by showing how three specific attributes, that I call
"Theory Y" leadership attributes, may aptly cristallize the description of positive leaders.
Those attributes are: self-awareness, ethical sense and integrity. I proposed a framework in
which those three attributes, taken together, may be delineated from behaviors that in turn
influence followers and contribute to the positive outcomes highlighted by empirical studies. I
derived specific, testable propositions for transforming those attributes into variables and
verifying how they may influence both performance and employee wellbeing, before
suggesting practical avenues for further research and implications for practice.
As insights both from McGregor and the positive streams were pivotal in the reflection
on leadership, I can only hope that this paper will bring clarity and encourage scholars of the
various currents to find constructive ways for further developments.
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