Distributed leadership at a South African university of technology : a multi-stakeholder model
Date
2019-11
Authors
Haniff, Naseem
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Abstract
Leadership has been an area of interest for millennia, but never more so than
within a 21st century VUCA (volatile, uncertain, complex and ambiguous)
world. Globalisation, massification, rapid socio-economic changes in tandem
with the demands of the Fourth Industrial Revolution are all challenges faced
by higher education institutions internationally. South African higher education
has not escaped these leadership challenges, but in addition faces its own
unique issues, post-apartheid. The country’s democratic dispensation required
that institutional governance and leadership be shared and participative, which
aligns well to a distributed leadership stance. However, more than two
decades later, events such as # FeesMustFall national campaigns, the strident
student discourse and the rising clamour for transformation, questions if real
change has actually taken place. This study examined the issue of university
transformation by assessing multi-stakeholder participation in leadership and
governance at a South African University of Technology.
Taking cognisance of the multiplicity of issues facing higher education
institutions it was important to utilise robust research methods, hence, the
paradigm choice of a systems thinking worldview and complexity sciences.
This study used multi-method research employing the Viable System Model
(VSM) with the rich picture technique of the Soft System Methodology (SSM).
Data was collected through qualitative interviews, respondent observation and
archival data and examined using thematic analysis. Using the VSM as a
diagnostic tool, enabled weaknesses and strengths of the institution to be
identified, which informed the building of an institution specific model of
distributed leadership.
The findings of this study demonstrated institutional viability, albeit, in a
hierarchical, bureaucratic manner. It nevertheless highlighted weaknesses of
‘soft’ or people-centred issues. Other identified concerns was that the
university was more inward focused, on the ‘here and now’, often ignoring the ‘outside and then’ that is, the external environment and could imply that the
institution is not well placed to handle national and global stressors. The model
of distributed leadership addresses this deficit.
This study established the appropriateness and applicability of using a
systems thinking approach namely the VSM as a diagnostic tool to assess
institutional shortcomings. In this way, it enabled appropriate
recommendations and suggestions to improve the institutions viability to
address the complexities facing 21st century higher educational institutions
Description
Submitted in fulfillment of requirements of the Ph.D. Management Sciences specializing in Leadership and Complexity at the Durban University of Technology, Durban, South Africa, 2019.
Keywords
Leadership, South African higher education, Leadership challenges
Citation
DOI
https://doi.org/10.51415/10321/4375