Alliance for Servant Leadership
What is servant leadership?
Servant-Leadership is a philosophy which encourages those who serve
first, and then lead as a way of expanding service to individuals and
institutions. Servant-leaders may or may not hold formal leadership
positions. Servant-leadership encourages collaboration, trust, foresight,
listening, and the ethical use of power and empowerment.
Robert K Greenleaf coined the term Servant-Leader. In his book, Servant
as Leader (1970), Robert Greenleaf laid out the following description:
“The servant-leader is servant first… It begins with the natural feeling
that one wants to serve, to serve first. Then conscious choice brings one to
aspire to lead. He or she is sharply different from the person who is leader
first, perhaps because of the need to assuage an unusual power drive or to
acquire material possessions. For such it will be a later choice to serve –
after leadership is established. The leader-first and the servant-first are
two extreme types. Between them there are shadings and blends that are part
of the infinite variety of human nature.
The difference manifests itself in the care taken by the servant-first to
make sure that other people’s highest priority needs are being served. The
best test, and difficult to administer, is: do those served grow as persons;
do they, while being served, become healthier, wiser, freer, more
autonomous, more likely themselves to become servants? And, what is the
effect on the least privileged in society; will they benefit, or, at least,
will they not be further deprived?”
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