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A Meta-Analysis of Shared Leadership and Team Effectiveness

A growing number of studies have examined the "sharedness" of leadership processes in teams (i.e., shared leadership, collective leadership, and distributed leadership). We meta-analytically cumulated 42 independent samples of shared leadership and examined its relationship to team effecti...

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Published in:Journal of applied psychology 2014-03, Vol.99 (2), p.181-198
Main Authors: Wang, Danni, Waldman, David A, Zhang, Zhen
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Language:English
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Zhang, Zhen
description A growing number of studies have examined the "sharedness" of leadership processes in teams (i.e., shared leadership, collective leadership, and distributed leadership). We meta-analytically cumulated 42 independent samples of shared leadership and examined its relationship to team effectiveness. Our findings reveal an overall positive relationship (ρ = .34). But perhaps more important, what is actually shared among members appears to matter with regard to team effectiveness. That is, shared traditional forms of leadership (e.g., initiating structure and consideration) show a lower relationship (ρ = .18) than either shared new-genre leadership (e.g., charismatic and transformational leadership; ρ = .34) or cumulative, overall shared leadership (ρ = .35). In addition, shared leadership tends to be more strongly related to team attitudinal outcomes and behavioral processes and emergent team states, compared with team performance. Moreover, the effects of shared leadership are stronger when the work of team members is more complex. Our findings further suggest that the referent used in measuring shared leadership does not influence its relationship with team effectiveness and that compared with vertical leadership, shared leadership shows unique effects in relation to team performance. In total, our study not only cumulates extant research on shared leadership but also provides directions for future research to move forward in the study of plural forms of leadership.
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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS); PsycARTICLES
subjects Attitudes
Biological and medical sciences
Charismatic leaders
Cooperative Behavior
Effectiveness studies
Employee attitude
Employee management relations
Fundamental and applied biological sciences. Psychology
Group Performance
Group Processes
Human
Humans
Leadership
Leadership Style
Meta-analysis
Occupational psychology
Organization and management. Professional relation
Organizational behavior
Plurals
Psychology. Psychoanalysis. Psychiatry
Psychology. Psychophysiology
Samples
Shared leadership
Systematic review
Team work
Teams
Teamwork
Work Teams
title A Meta-Analysis of Shared Leadership and Team Effectiveness
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