"Divorced from ethics, leadership is reduced to management and politics to mere technique." -- James MacGregor Burns
James MacGregor Burns (born August 3, 1918) was a presidential biographer, authority on Leadership Studies, Woodrow Wilson Professor (emeritus) of Political Science at Williams College, where he also received his B.A. He was also a scholar at the James MacGregor Burns Academy of Leadership at the University of Maryland, College Park. He received a Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award in 1971 for his Soldier of Freedom 1940-1945.
His key innovation in leadership theory was shifting away from studying the traits of great men and transactional management to focus on the interaction of leaders and led as collaborators working toward mutual benefit. He is best known for contributions to the Transformational, Aspirational and Visionary schools of leadership theory. Burns has advocated repeal of the 22nd amendment to allow effective presidents to have a third or fourth term of office.
Excerpts from his book Leadership:
Leadership over human beings is exercised when persons with certain motives and purposes mobilize, in competition or conflict with others, institutional, political, psychological, and other resources so as to arouse, engage, and satisfy the motives of followers... in order to realize goals mutually held by both leaders and followers....
Transformational leadership occurs when one or more persons engage with others in such a way that leaders and followers raise one another to higher levels of motivation and morality.
That people can be lifted into their better selves is the secret of transforming leadership and the moral and practical theme of this work.
"A revolution is an act of violence whereby one class shatters the authority of another.""In real life, the most practical advice for leaders is not to treat pawns like pawns, nor princes like princes, but all persons like persons.""Leaders are not pale reflectors of major social conflicts; they play up some, play down others, ignore still others.""Woodrow Wilson called for leaders who, by boldly interpreting the nation's conscience, could lift a people out of their everyday selves. That people can be lifted into their better selves is the secret of transforming leadership."