Log In
Or create an account -> 
Imperial Library
  • Home
  • About
  • News
  • Upload
  • Forum
  • Help
  • Login/SignUp

Index
Title Page Dedication Table of Figures Foreword Acknowledgments Introduction
CHAPTER 1 - Leading in Dangerous Situations An Overview of the Unique Challenges
WHO SHOULD READ THIS BOOK? DANGEROUS CONTEXTS SOCIAL DEMANDS ORGANIZATIONAL DEMANDS ABOUT THIS BOOK CONCLUSION NOTES
SECTION ONE - Enhancing One’s Psychological Body Armor
CHAPTER 2 - What Leaders Should Know about Courage
WHAT IS COURAGE? TYPES OF COURAGE SUBJECTIVITY AND JUDGMENTS OF COURAGEOUSNESS GOAL ATTAINMENT AND JUDGMENTS OF COURAGE LEADERS: WHY BEING COURAGEOUS MATTERS LEADER ACTIONS FOR FOSTERING COURAGE CONCLUSION KEY TAKE-AWAY POINTS KEY REFERENCES REFERENCES
CHAPTER 3 - Understanding and Managing Stress
WHAT DOES STRESS ENTAIL? COMMUNICATING HEALTH RISKS STRESS THEORY CONCLUSION NOTES
CHAPTER 4 - Resilience and Leadership in Dangerous Contexts
WHAT IS RESILIENCE? LEARNED HELPLESSNESS AND LEARNED OPTIMISM HARDINESS CONCLUSION NOTES
CHAPTER 5 - Understanding and Mitigating Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder
PREVALENCE AND SYMPTOMS OF PTSD THE DEVELOPMENT OF PTSD MITIGATING PTSD LEADERSHIP ACTIONS TO STRENGTHEN SUBORDINATES’ PSYCHOLOGICAL BODY ARMOR CONCLUSION KEY TAKE-AWAY POINTS KEY REFERENCES NOTES
CHAPTER 6 - Obedience and Personal Responsibility
ABU GHRAIB, 2003 SETTING THE STAGE: OBEDIENCE AND LEADERSHIP NEW HAVEN, 1961 PALO ALTO, 1971 BEYOND SITUATIONS DEVELOPING AND SUSTAINING THE RIGHT LEADERSHIP CLIMATE CHALLENGING ASPECTS OF DANGEROUS SITUATIONS OBEDIENCE AND PERSONAL RESPONSIBILITY: LEADERSHIP DEVELOPMENT IMPLICATIONS KEY TAKE-AWAY POINTS NOTES
CHAPTER 7 - Ethics in Dangerous Situations
ACCOMPLISHING MISSIONS WHILE MINIMIZING HARM SETTING THE TERMS MORAL STATUS OF ADVERSARIES AND NON-ADVERSARIES CHALLENGES TO THE WAR—LAW ENFORCEMENT PARADIGM COMMITTING HARM, DISCRIMINATION IN USE OF FORCE AND TARGETS, NECESSITY, AND PROPORTIONALITY IMMUNITY FROM HARM AND THE ETHICS OF RISK MANAGING RISK FINDING COMMON GROUND CONCLUSION KEY TAKE-AWAY POINTS KEY REFERENCES NOTES
CHAPTER 8 - Meaning-Making The Search for Meaning in Dangerous Contexts
WHAT IS MEANING-MAKING? PHILOSOPHICAL UNDERPINNING OF MEANING-MAKING PSYCHOLOGICAL TRADITIONS MEANING-MAKING IN DANGEROUS CONTEXTS HOW CAN LEADERS FACILITATE MEANING-MAKING? LEADERSHIP GOALS LEADERSHIP STRATEGY MEASURING THE OUTCOMES OR MEANINGS MADE CONCLUSION NOTES
SECTION TWO - Influencing When People Are in Harm’s Way
CHAPTER 9 - Trust The Key to Leading When Lives Are on the Line
TRUST AND LEADERSHIP THE IROC TRUST DEVELOPMENT MODEL CONCLUSION KEY TAKE-AWAY POINTS KEY REFERENCES NOTES
CHAPTER 10 - Building Resilient Teams
TEAM RESILIENCY: AN ILLUSTRATION THE ELEMENTS OF TEAM VIABILITY MOVING FROM TEAM VIABILITY TO TEAM RESILIENCY CONCLUSION REFERENCES
CHAPTER 11 - Morale The Essential Intangible
WHAT IS MORALE? CULTURE AND MORALE BUILDING HIGH MORALE CONCLUSION KEY TAKE-AWAY POINTS KEY REFERENCES NOTES
CHAPTER 12 - Leadership When It Matters Most Lessons on Influence from In ...
A CASE OF IN EXTREMIS LEADERSHIP: POLAR EXPLORATION LEADING TEAMS IN EXTREMIS SOURCES OF POWER AND INFLUENCE KEY TAKE-AWAY POINTS KEY REFERENCES NOTES
CHAPTER 13 - The Decisive Moment The Science of Decision Making under Stress
THE ELEMENTS OF COMMAND AND DECISION MAKING INTUITIVE THINKING VERSUS ANALYTICAL THINKING COMBINING INTUITION AND ANALYSIS TO MANAGE DANGEROUS SITUATIONS BARRIERS TO DECISION MAKING NOVELTY AND COMPLEXITY POINTS TO INTERDEPENDENCE IMPROVING DECISION MAKING LEADERSHIP IMPLICATIONS NOTES
CHAPTER 14 - Crisis Leadership The Station Club Fire
CRISIS MANAGEMENT VERSUS CRISIS LEADERSHIP CRISIS PHASES AND LEADERSHIP COMPETENCIES METHODOLOGY BACKGROUND ELEMENTS OF CRISIS LEADERSHIP CHALLENGES LEADERSHIP COMPETENCIES EXHIBITED DURING THE STATION FIRE KEY TAKE-AWAY POINTS NOTES
CHAPTER 15 - Leading and Managing Those Working and Living in Captive Environments
CONTEXT AND ENVIRONMENTAL DIFFERENCES CORRECTIONAL MANAGEMENT MODELS TRUST AND PSYCHOLOGICAL SAFETY POWER AND ABUSE OF IT MAINTAINING A POSITIVE AND SAFE ENVIRONMENT LEVERAGING POSITIVE PSYCHOLOGY AND AUTHENTIC LEADERSHIP AUTHENTIC LEADERSHIP KEY TAKE-AWAY POINTS KEY REFERENCES NOTES
CHAPTER 16 - Leading across Cultures
CLOSE CULTURAL CLASHES DISTANT CULTURAL CLASHES SWITCHING CULTURAL GEARS LEARNING TO LEAD ACROSS CULTURES CULTURAL COMPETENCE: THE WAY AHEAD NOTES
SECTION THREE - Leveraging the Organization
CHAPTER 17 - Creating a Culture for Leading and Performing in the Extreme
CULTURE: LITERATURE REVIEW AND THEORETICAL FRAMEWORK PRACTICAL APPLICATION OF CULTURAL CONCEPTS: THE LOS ANGELES POLICE DEPARTMENT THE LAPD POLICE ACADEMY TRAINING PARADIGM LEADER AND LEADERSHIP DEVELOPMENT IMPLICATIONS: AN INTEGRATED ARMY (GREEN) AND ... KEY REFERENCES NOTES
CHAPTER 18 - Choosing the Elite Recruitment, Assessment, and Selection in Law ...
JOINING THE ELITE U.S. ARMY SPECIAL FORCES THE NORWEGIAN ARMY SPECIAL FORCES CONCLUSION KEY TAKE-AWAY POINTS KEY REFERENCES NOTES
CHAPTER 19 - Leader Development for Dangerous Contexts
DEFINING DANGEROUS CONTEXTS DEFINING LEADER AND LEADERSHIP DEVELOPMENT FOR DANGEROUS CONTEXTS TARGETS OF DEVELOPMENT FOR DANGEROUS CONTEXTS FUTURE DIRECTIONS KEY TAKE-AWAY POINTS KEY REFERENCES NOTES
Conclusion
CHAPTER 20 - A Holistic Approach to Leading in Dangerous Situations
A HOLISTIC DEVELOPMENTAL MODEL FOR INDIVIDUALS OPERATING IN DANGEROUS CONTEXTS HOLISTIC DEVELOPMENT FOR DANGEROUS CONTEXT ORGANIZATIONS NOTES
ABOUT THE EDITORS ABOUT THE CONTRIBUTORS INDEX Copyright Page
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →
  • ← Prev
  • Back
  • Next →

Chief Librarian: Las Zenow <zenow@riseup.net>
Fork the source code from gitlab
.

This is a mirror of the Tor onion service:
http://kx5thpx2olielkihfyo4jgjqfb7zx7wxr3sd4xzt26ochei4m6f7tayd.onion