Reconsidering Bad Leadership and Bad Theory to Improve Research
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Background
3. Methodology
4. Analysis
4.1. Critiques over the Diagnoses of ‘Bad’ Leadership
4.2. Critiques over Possible Prescriptions
4.3. Critiques over the Impact of Leadership Research
5. Findings and Discussion
5.1. Main Findings
5.2. Implications
5.3. Consequent Directions for Improvement
5.4. Barriers to Change
6. Limitations and Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
| 1 | This methodology is replicable and not uncommon. For example, the initial step—providing a structured, targeted critique of a high-quality theoretical paper that addresses a significant research question—is seen in the dialogue, essay, and debate sections of many good (and COPE-compliant) journals. The second step—of providing an alternate thesis that provides a complementary perspective on the target’s premises—is often seen in contrast-based theory-building. The third step—of generating a synthesis from which to provide constructive directions to improve the understanding of the core phenomenon (and about related, more general issues)—is perhaps less common, but a natural extension of the first two steps. |
| 2 | For example, business school rankings frauds perpetrated by ‘bad’ deans shift reources (e.g., research funding and tuition) away from more deserving schools. |
| 3 | Consider that Ghoshal et al. (1999, in Sloan Management Review) praised Jack Welch (in its fourth last paragraph) as ‘historic’ and ‘to be remembered as making value creation his fundamental business’, and as ‘embodying a new moral contract of creating value for society’. This is the same Jack Welch that Cunha et al. (2024) refer to fifteen times as an ‘asshole’ after the fact. |
| 4 | Ghoshal et al. (1999) are doubly wrong about Porter. In one instance, they allege that his work had a negative influence on managers, but then contradict that with an admission, almost 20 years after his famous book, that ‘most managers … see [their] role to create value’ (in their fifth last paragraph). In the other instance, they are mistaken about Porter’s actual message—his most famous (and first) book (from 1980) actually mentions value creation in its very second line, implying its importance for managers to pursue, which is the opposite of what they allege. |
| 5 | By way of contrast to academics teaching about ‘better’ leaders, religious leaders have had millennia to teach their followers about ‘the better ways’, doing so with consistent messaging, and based on stable books dictated to them from their Gods, and that has not often worked out well for everyone. An alternative approach to teaching about ‘bad’ leadership is simply to take the judgment aspect (about what is ‘good’ or ‘bad’) out of the analysis, and instead describe the facts, such as the causes, benefits, costs, risks, and processes of specific leadership behaviors, along with the various ways to assess any ethical issues involving those facts, and then let the students decide what is best in their particular situations. |
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| Leader Behaviors | |||
| Bad | Good | ||
| Leader-based Outcomes for Stakeholders | Good | Maverick | Paragon |
| Bad | Villain | Naive | |
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Arend, R.; Li, J. Reconsidering Bad Leadership and Bad Theory to Improve Research. Adm. Sci. 2025, 15, 428. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci15110428
Arend R, Li J. Reconsidering Bad Leadership and Bad Theory to Improve Research. Administrative Sciences. 2025; 15(11):428. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci15110428
Chicago/Turabian StyleArend, Richard, and Jie Li. 2025. "Reconsidering Bad Leadership and Bad Theory to Improve Research" Administrative Sciences 15, no. 11: 428. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci15110428
APA StyleArend, R., & Li, J. (2025). Reconsidering Bad Leadership and Bad Theory to Improve Research. Administrative Sciences, 15(11), 428. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci15110428

