Uncovering Indigenous Models of Leadership


An Ethnographic Case Study of Samoa's Talavou Clan

Price:
Sale price$82.99
Stock:
In stock, 1 unit

By Robert Jon Peterson
Imprint:
LEXINGTON BOOKS
Release Date:
Format:
PAPERBACK
Pages:
128

Request Academic Copy

Button Actions

Please copy the ISBN for submitting review copy form

Description

Acknowledgements



Chapter 1: The Global Paradigm, World System, and Theoretical Context

Chapter 2: Research from the Field and the Journey Home

Chapter 3: Research Approach and Aiga / Family Narratives of Samoan Leadership

Chapter 4: Discussion and Conclusions

Bibliography


With a sharp, informed critique of the “Global North,” Jon Peterson tees up its growing inequities and captures his own complexity as a member of both this North and the “Global South” through the Samoan “Talavou” clan. It is with this polyocular gaze that Peterson deftly captures and expresses his own duality in finding himself belonging to more that one set of cultural relatives.

Focusing on leadership, a by-product of culture, as an “expression of a lived experience,” Peterson takes the reader on a thoughtful, intellectual and purposeful journey fleshing out a leadership for community that emerges from and embraces the communal. Juxtaposed to the exploitive culture of “the North,” Peterson crafts a Samoan metaphor for servant leadership, utilizing voices from both cultures and emphasizing collective leadership through the works of Durkheim, Blumer, Bourdieu and Tuhiwai-Smith.

— James Nelson, Ph.D., LMFT, President, Change Inc.


You may also like

Recently viewed