Charisma as signal: An evolutionary perspective on charismatic leadership |
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Authors: | Allen Grabo Brian R. Spisak Mark van Vugt |
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Affiliation: | 1. Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Department of Experimental and Applied Psychology, Van der Boechorststraat 1, 1081 BT Amsterdam, The Netherlands;2. Department of Management, University of Otago, New Zealand;3. Vrije Unversiteit Amsterdam, Department of Economics and Business Administration |
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Abstract: | We present an evolutionary perspective on charismatic leadership, arguing that charisma has evolved as a credible signal of a person's ability to solve a coordination challenge requiring urgent collective action from group members. We suggest that a better understanding of charisma's evolutionary and biological origins and functions can provide a broader perspective in which to situate current debates surrounding the utility and validity of charismatic leadership as a construct in the social sciences. We outline several key challenges which have shaped our followership psychology, and argue that the benefits of successful coordination in ancestral environments has led to the evolution of context-dependent psychological mechanisms which are especially attuned to cues and signals of outstanding personal leadership qualities. We elaborate on several implications of this signaling hypothesis of charismatic leadership, including opportunities for deception (dishonest signaling) and for large-scale coordination. |
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Keywords: | Charisma Leadership index Signaling theory Evolutionary psychology Congruency hypothesis |
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