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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 6 page paper discusses leadership in the pre-classical, classical, modern and postmodern eras, assesses whether or not the leaders were effective for their time, and compares the styles. Bibliography lists 6 sources.
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6 pages (~225 words per page)
File: D0_HVLeadAg.rtf
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eras; assesses the models effectiveness in regard to its timeframe, and compares them with one another. Discussion First, this subject is incredibly broad so the student will want to narrow
it down before beginning the research. Even a preliminary survey of material reveals that a subject as vague as "leadership models" is almost impossible to research adequately. It is necessary
to do numerous searches using parameters such as "pre-classical leaders"; "classical leaders" and so on to narrow it to a practical size. After doing that, the most logical approach seems
to be to take one example from each era; anything else is unworkable. Pre-Classical Leadership: The first thing to do is to define what we mean by "pre-classical," and since
our civilization comes from the Greeks, well use Greece as our example. The pre-classical period in Greece is generally considered to be 800-500 BCE (The early Greek world, history and
prehistory, 2006-hereafter "The early Greek world, 2006"). The Greek pre-classical age is also called the "Age of Tyrants because powerful individuals came to rule the majority of these city-states by
overthrowing the existing regime in a military coup" (The early Greek world, 2006). The word "tyrant" in this context is not entirely negative as it is today; to the pre-classical
Greeks it had negative connotations, but also neutral and even positive ones (The early Greek world, 2006). One leader from this period is Pisistratus of Athens (The early Greek
world, 2006). He came to power through the use of "force and violence" but once in power, he used his resources for the good of Athens (The early Greek world,
2006). Among his other accomplishments are the fact that he "established festivals that united the Greeks culturally" and stabilized Athenian coinage, "making it widely respected throughout the Mediterranean world" (The
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