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leadership and management and leaders and managers respectively. The female
leadership style was discussed within the context of a changing management culture and
shown to be more suitable than male leadership style as it seems to be convergent with
new and softer management discourses. Be that as it may, critics believe that evidence of
female leadership style gathered so far is inconclusive as it is
based largely on anecdotal
evidence and results from contrived laboratory studies. Following on this discussion, the
theoretical and practical aspects of academic leadership at academic department level
focused on the roles, responsibilities, exercise of power and
challenges of departmental
headship. The role of HoD is fraught with ambiguity and conflict which are sources of
stress for the HoD. New demands are placed on the HoD in addition to the existing
requirements of the job. The HoD is now expected to
be both intellectual and
entrepreneurial. There are now more challenges in the job than ever before. Academic
leadership now includes areas of corporate management such as budget oversight,
marketing, personnel management and such like. A case study of
women in academic
leadership positions is used to illustrate how women perform some of their roles and
responsibilities and how they exercise power differently to men. Women also tend to be
more transformational in their leadership style than men and their feminine qualities of
caring and nurturing are what may be required by organisational cultures of the future.
However, at the same time, there is concern that in the academe the new organisational
cultures (with their emphasis on business principles of management) may be problematic
for academic women. There is therefore ambiguity in the fact that on the one hand there
are discourses of inclusion and arguments for more feminine qualities
of leadership, and
on the other, the male dominated culture of competition and success still persists within
organisations. From this perspective the ‘new managerialism’ may present an obstacle to
women aspiring to be leaders.
The literature reviewed in this chapter has highlighted the debate concerning female
leadership especially female leadership style. It may be concluded that women in
management face the same dilemmas as their male counterparts. Nevertheless women
encounter additional dilemmas because of their gender. Their leadership style may be
viewed with suspicion if it does not conform to the
accepted leadership schema, yet in
this new age of management there are calls for the very female leadership qualities and
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behaviour which is perceived as weak. Women managers and leaders can only help
themselves and those under them by exercising the kind of leadership and management
style that comes most naturally to them.
The next chapter explores the phenomenon of women’s under- representation in
academic leadership and management positions in higher education in
South Africa and
the UK, with particular reference to their statistical representation and the obstacles
preventing their advancement.