View Article |
Bad leadership: an examination of skill, desire, and adaptability in the Qur’an
Saeed, Diar Mahmood1.
Bad leadership is a relatively new complex topic. It has been an
understudied theme in academic literature and an underappreciated
topic among practitioners. The Qur’an support the seven types of
bad leadership as suggested by Kellerman and the Qur’an deepen
our understanding of this topic. Qur’an speaks about good and bad
leadership. Probably, that is the first study to speak about the different
kinds of bad leadership and to analyze it under the shade of Qur’an
such as: incompetent, rigid, intemperate, callous, corrupt, insular,
wicked. Bad leadership in the Qur’an is a new subject in this study.
Leaders may be bad in terms of skill or morality. And it is possible
to be bad in both. The Qur’an looks at the ongoing costs of bad
leadership and the benefits of its study. It argues quite convincingly
that bad leadership has a lingering and multigenerational effect. The
aim of this study to define bad leadership in Western and Islamic
perspectives, to analyze and discuss the Qur’anic verses related to
the subject of bad leadership, to extract lessons from the different
types of bad leadership in the Qur’an. This study uses textual
analysis of the Qur’an and Western literature and discourse analysis
to draw parallels between both as well as conclusions on the way to
successful leadership.
Affiliation:
- Universiti Sains Islam Malaysia, Malaysia
Download this article (This article has been downloaded 348 time(s))
|
|
Indexation |
Indexed by |
MyJurnal (2021) |
H-Index
|
2 |
Immediacy Index
|
0.000 |
Rank |
0 |
|
|
|