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Dive into the research topics where Lucia Crevani is active.

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Featured researches published by Lucia Crevani.


Leadership | 2018

Is there leadership in a fluid world? : Exploring the ongoing production of direction in organizing

Lucia Crevani

Although the idea of leadership being a process is clearly stated in leadership definitions, most researchers focus on individuals rather than observing and studying processes. This contradiction has been highlighted by a number of scholars turning to leadership processes and practices, thereby drawing attention to the interactional and social aspects of the phenomenon. Such contributions mostly take process perspectives in which entities still play an important role. In this article, I therefore aim at contributing to leadership studies based on a process ontology by exploring one central aspect of leadership work, the production of direction, processually. I do so by building on geographer Massey’s conception of space, thus adding a spatial dimension that enables me to conceptualize direction as the development of an evolving relational configuration. In order to empirically explore such a conceptualization, two constructs are proposed: the construction of positions and the construction of issues. The reading of leadership work thus produced leads me to suggest ‘clearing for action’ as a means of conveying the spatio-temporal and constructive (reality constructing) character of leadership work.


International Journal of Public Leadership | 2015

Leadership cultures and discursive hybridisation: On the cultural production of leadership in higher education reforms

Lucia Crevani; Marianne Ekman; Monica Lindgren; Johann Packendorff

Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to explore the concept of leadership culture and analyse how leadership cultures are produced in higher education reforms, in a hybridised discursive context of traditional academic values and emerging managerialism and leaderism. Design/methodology/approach – Building on a perspective on leadership as a cultural phenomenon emerging in processes in which societal, sectorial and professional discursive resources are invoked, this study adds to earlier studies on how notions of leadership are involved in the transformation of higher education organisations. To this end, the method combines a traditional qualitative study of change initiatives over a long period of time with participative observation. Focusing on two vignettes, the analysis centres on how several discursive resources are drawn upon in daily interaction. Findings – The emergence of hybrid leadership cultures in which several discursive resources are drawn upon in daily interaction is illustrated. This pa...


Archive | 2007

Leadership virtues and management knowledge : Questioning the unitary command perspective in leadership research

Lucia Crevani; Monica Lindgren; Johann Packendorff

Leadership virtues and management knowledge : Questioning the unitary command perspective in leadership research


Management Learning | 2017

Performative narcissism: When organizations are made successful, admirable, and unique through narcissistic work:

Lucia Crevani; Anette Hallin

Dramatic stories of corporate crises appear in newspapers and magazines all over the world; one explanation offered by scholars has been that the affected organization suffered (literally) from narcissism. As responsible, ethical, non-narcissistic behavior is claimed to be crucial for management, the purpose of this article is to advance our knowledge about narcissism in organizations by developing an understanding of which organizational work enacts organizations as successful, admired, and unique. The dominant use of narcissism as a pathological condition limits the possibility to learn about organizing processes since it provides simplistic explanations. By introducing the notion of performative narcissism, we re-focus attention from the pathological condition of organizations to potentially pervasive organizational practices. Thus, we see that narcissistic work is a sociomaterial process not limited to organizational borders, but connecting and enrolling people, artifacts, animals, and places into mutually dependent, shifting, and composite assemblages that emerge through practices reproducing the organization as successful and unique.


Scandinavian Journal of Management | 2010

Leadership, not leaders: On the study of leadership as practices and interactions

Lucia Crevani; Monica Lindgren; Johann Packendorff


International Journal of Leadership Studies | 2007

Shared leadership : A post-heroic perspective on leadership as a collective construction

Lucia Crevani; Monica Lindgren; Johann Packendorff


Service Business | 2011

Innovation management in service firms: a research agenda

Lucia Crevani; Kristina Palm; Annika Schilling


Project Management Journal | 2014

Project Leadership in Becoming : A Process Study of an Organizational Change Project

Johann Packendorff; Lucia Crevani; Monica Lindgren


EIASM workshop on Moral Foundations of Management Knowledge | 2006

Sustainable Leadership and Management Knowledge: : On collective constructions of leadership

Lucia Crevani; Monica Lindgren; Johann Packendorff


european conference on computer supported cooperative work | 2018

Infrastructuring for remote night monitoring : Frictions in striving for transparency when digitalising care service

Christoffer Andersson; Michela Cozza; Lucia Crevani; Jonathan Schunnesson

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Monica Lindgren

Royal Institute of Technology

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Johann Packendorff

Royal Institute of Technology

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Anette Hallin

Mälardalen University College

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Michela Cozza

Mälardalen University College

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Kristina Palm

Royal Institute of Technology

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Marianne Ekman

Royal Institute of Technology

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Annika Schilling

Stockholm School of Economics

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Mats Engwall

Royal Institute of Technology

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Jackie Ford

University of Bradford

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