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7 - Trouble at the top: high-toxicity implications of a leader with antisocial personality disorder

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 January 2011

Alan Goldman
Affiliation:
Arizona State University
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Summary

If psychopathic individuals are consciously aware of their heightened sense of boredom when compared with others, they render it acceptable by redefining it as a superior attribute of their personality. Others may be characterized by them as leading sedentary or mundane lives, yet their benchmark is always risk taking through overt behavior, rather than satisfaction through emotional experiences within themselves and with others.

(Meloy, 1992, p. 111)

A COMPANY FACED WITH AN ABUSIVE LEADER

In this chapter a company finds itself on the couch when it discovers that a high-ranking leader may be suffering from a psychological disorder that is having serious consequences for its workforce. At stake is the need to enhance organizational readiness for dealing with dysfunctional behavior centered in a strong but abusive leader. Of particular concern is the plight of the company faced with physical and emotional assaults on employees rationalized by a leader who contends that he is driving lazy workers toward new levels of motivation and productivity. Despite his many achievements, awards and accolades, the Senior Manager of Operations has also been degrading and “manhandling” employees in a series of physical and verbal altercations that have resulted in grievances and pending litigation.

Particularly troublesome have been the shortcomings of the company's internal experts in addressing the problem with leadership. Following a prolonged and destructive delay marked by an assumption that “the conflicts were quite normal and could be worked out with patience and TLC,” verbal confrontation escalated into physical violence.

Type
Chapter
Information
Destructive Leaders and Dysfunctional Organizations
A Therapeutic Approach
, pp. 132 - 155
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2009

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