This book has two parts. The first part begins by addressing why leadership development and training are essential in preparing lawyers for the roles and responsibilities they will have in their careers. The following six chapters describe The Five Practices of Exemplary Leadership®, providing qualitative and quantitative evidence of how these leadership practices improve personal and organizational productivity and stature. This operational system for leadership forms an accessible and practical basis for learning to lead and becoming the best leader you can be. The five chapters in the second part address the context in which lawyers exercise leadership. For example, thinking about leading in client relationships, in internal relationships (such as within the law firm or corporate legal office), and public roles. Examined are vital issues regarding client development ethics, effective decision-making, building emotional intelligence, diversity, equity and inclusion, and handling conflicts and adversity. In the Afterword, we focus on developing and adopting a leadership development mindset necessary for leading in challenging times. We also offer perspectives on how to be a lawyer leader who positively impacts the legal profession and the world.
Les mer
Table of Contents:
Part 1
Foundations of Educating Lawyers for Leadership: Why Leadership Development is Essential for Lawyers
Leadership: What It Means and Why It’s Important to Lawyers
Leaders Model the Way
Leaders Inspire a Shared Vision
Leaders Challenge the Process
Leaders Enable Others to Act
Leaders Encourage the Heart
Part 2
Personal Values, Ethics, and Becoming a Lawyer-Leader
Making Decisions, Leading Innovation
Becoming a Team Leader
Developing Emotional Intelligence and Handling Adversity
Leading the Charge for Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion
Afterword
Endnotes
About the Authors
Index
Les mer
Produktdetaljer
Utgiver
Vendor
American Bar Association
Om bidragsyterne
Donald J. Polden is dean emeritus and professor of law at
Santa Clara University, where he served as dean of the School of Law for ten
years. He is a well-recognized authority on leadership education and
development for lawyers and law students. He drew national attention to the
need for more formal and research-based scholarship and curriculum development
in legal education through the early creation of a law school course on lawyers
as leaders. Professor Deborah Rhode of Stanford, another early pioneer of lawyer
leadership education, referred to Don as “truly a founding father of the field
of lawyers and leadership.”
Don also is a demonstrated leader, serving as dean of two
major law schools from 1993 to 2013 and promoting legal education within the
American Bar Association and the Association of American Law Schools. His list of
significant leadership roles includes chair of the ABA committee that established
accreditation standards for more than two hundred law schools, leading dozens
of law school accreditation teams, and serving as president of the Memphis Bar
Association, to name a few. While at Santa Clara University, Don has served as
director of the law school’s Center for Global Law and Policy, responsible for
ten international legal education programs, several of which he taught in while
also lecturing on comparative law at universities in China and Hungary. Don is
frequently called upon to serve as a mediator, arbitrator, and judicial officer
in many Santa Clara campus disciplinary proceedings.
Following service as Santa Clara’s dean, Don has been
actively engaged in teaching and scholarship, especially in the areas of
leadership development, professional identity formation of law students and new
lawyers, and lawyering skills and competencies. He also continues to teach
corporate, sports, and antitrust law, and cofounded and led Santa Clara’s
nationally prominent Institute for Sports Law and Ethics. Don consults with law
firms on leadership development of their lawyers, such as intellectual property
and corporate law powerhouse Haynes Boone, and lectures at the U.S. Army’s
Judge Advocate General graduate program on leadership development of U.S. Army
lawyer officers, the University of Calgary law school, and others.
Don created and leads Santa Clara’s Institute for Lawyer
Leadership Education, which has conducted several national conferences and
workshops on educating lawyers and students in leadership in the legal
profession, including five leadership workshops for legal education hosted by Santa
Clara from 2005 to 2013. He was instrumental in the 2018 launch of a new
Section on Leadership for the Association of American Law Schools. This section
includes more than six hundred members, representing nearly one hundred law
schools’ courses and programs. The section meets annually to promote leadership
education in law schools, advance legal scholarship concerning law and
leadership, and arrange programming. In 2020–21, Don served as chair of the
section.
Don received an undergraduate degree in business economics
from The George Washington University and his JD from Indiana University School
of Law. During law school, he wrote for the Indiana Law Review and following
graduation served as a judicial law clerk on both state appellate and federal
trial courts. He practiced antitrust law, including participating in five
federal jury trials, and he argued several cases in the U.S. Courts of Appeal
and the U.S. Supreme Court. Don is licensed to practice law in the state of
Iowa and federal courts.
Don has been teaching leadership for lawyers’ classes for
more than a decade and is a frequent speaker at national conferences, other law
schools’ classes, and within law firms on leadership and the legal profession. He
is the author of numerous law review articles on lawyer leadership, which have
been published in the Baylor Law Review, Santa Clara Law Review, the Hofstra
Law Review, the Tennessee Law Review, and the Tennessee Journal of Law and
Policy. His antitrust scholarship has been published in the Harvard Journal on
Legislation, and his work has been cited by the U.S. Supreme Court. Don
coauthored Sports, Ethics and Leadership and Leading in Law: Leadership
Development for Law Students (with Barry Posner), and he has authored several
book chapters on lawyer leadership, employment law, and government regulation
law. Don received the Edwin Owens Lawyer of the Year award given by the Santa
Clara University Law School.
Barry Z. Posner is the Michael J. Accolti, S. J. Professor of Leadership at Santa Clara University and chair of the Management and Entrepreneurship
Department in the Leavey School of Business, where he previously served for twelve years as dean, six years as associate dean for graduate programs,
and six years as associate dean for executive education. Barry has received the Association for Talent Development’s highest award for Distinguished Contribution to Workplace Learning and Performance. He has been recognized as one of the top fifty leadership coaches in America, ranked among the most influential HR thinkers in the world by HR magazine, and Inc. magazine included him among the world’s top seventy-five leadership and management experts.
Barry is the coauthor (with Jim Kouzes) of the award-winning and best-selling leadership book The Leadership Challenge. Now in its seventh edition,
with more than three million copies in print, the book continues to be a groundbreaking research study, combining keen insights with practical applications, and has been translated into twenty-two foreign languages. It is listed among The 100 Best Business Books of All Time, receiving book-of-the-year honors by the American Council of Health Care Executives and Fast Company, and the Critics’ Choice Award from the nation’s book
review editors. Kouzes and Posner’s Leadership Practices Inventory (LPI) has been called “the most reliable, up-to-date leadership instrument available
today.” The 360-degree online version has been completed by more than four million people.
Barry has coauthored other award-winning, inspiring, and
practical books on leadership: Everyday People, Extraordinary Leadership: How
to Make a Difference Regardless of Your Title, Role, or Authority; Leading in
Law: Leadership Development for Law Students; Leadership in Higher Education:
Practices that Make a Difference; Stop Selling & Start Leading; Learning
Leadership: The Five Fundamentals for Becoming an Exemplary Leader; Turning
Adversity into Opportunity; Finding the Courage to Lead; Great Leadership
Creates Great Workplaces; Credibility: How Leaders Gain and Lose It, Why People
Demand It; The Truth about Leadership: The No-Fads, Heart-of-the-Matter Facts
You Need to Know; Encouraging the Heart: A Leader’s Guide to Rewarding and
Recognizing Others; A Leader’s Legacy; Extraordinary Leadership in Australia
and New Zealand; Making Extraordinary Things Happen in Asia; and The Student
Leadership Challenge.
Barry is an internationally renowned scholar who has
published more than one hundred research and practitioner-oriented articles in
such publications as the Harvard Business Review, Academy of Management
Journal, Journal of Applied Psychology, Human Relations, Personnel Psychology,
Journal of Selling, and IEEE Transactions on Engineering Management. He has
served on a number of public and nonprofit boards, such as the American
Institute of Architects, Berkeley Food Network, Center for Excellence in
Nonprofits, Global Women’s Leadership Network, Sigma Phi Epsilon Fraternity,
SVCreates, and Uplift Family Services.
He received an undergraduate degree in political science
from the University of California–Santa Barbara, a master’s degree from The
Ohio State University in public administration, and his PhD in organizational behavior
and administrative theory from the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. At
Santa Clara, he has received several outstanding teaching and leadership
honors, including the President’s Distinguished Faculty Award and the School’s
Extraordinary Faculty Award. Barry has been a visiting professor at the
University of Western Australia, Hong Kong University of Science and
Technology, Sabanci University (Istanbul), the University of Auckland (New
Zealand), and Seattle University. He has made presentations and conducted
leadership development programs for corporations across the globe and has been
involved with leadership development efforts at more than seventy-five college
campuses.