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Sustaining successful organisational change through leadership competence within Bahrain oil and gas: the power of Sustainable Network Leadership approach

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posted on 2024-07-22, 09:18 authored by Nawaf Husain AlGhanem, John MendyJohn Mendy
<p>  </p> <p><strong>Purpose</strong> – Despite some academic recognition that leadership is particularly significant in reshaping the oil and gas industry’s contributions to global economic development and the sustainability of global energy supplies at affordable prices (Sharma et al., 2022), the attendant problem of how the industry’s leadership contributes towards the preservation of global environment and the maintenance of ecosystems’ balance, among other sustainability challenges, remains an academic lag. This calls for the urgent need for oil and gas companies to practise effective sustainable leadership approach at multiple organisational levels to address global environmental, economic, and social challenges. </p> <p><strong>Design/methodology/approach</strong> – This paper adopts an interpretivist/constructivist philosophical stance, where findings have been extracted from in-depth thick descriptive qualitative research in Bahrain oil and gas industry. Companies operating within Bahrain oil and gas industry were identified as the unit of analysis. Empirical data are gathered through semi-structured interviews from senior management and analysed using thematic analysis. This paper is structured as follows: introduction, contextualisation of the UNSDGs in the oil and gas industry, literature on network leadership, research methods used to gather and analyse data from Bahrain oil and gas industry findings, contributions, limitations, and trajectories for further studies. </p> <p><strong>Findings</strong> – The study’s participants argued that the emergence of transformational and Sustainable Network Leadership is essential to successfully and sustainably implement the UN SDGs. In other words, the Sustainable Network Leadership is a contribution to the single, leadership competences approach of previous scholarship (Weber et al., 2022; Kumalo and Scheepers, 2021) partly because it evolves around the notion of positioning different network and change actors based on their capacity to lead, exchange their knowledge, effectively communicate the need to comply with SDGs and the skills to establish high density within a complex network of actors.</p> <p><strong>Research limitations/implications</strong> – This study recognises its limitations in the sense that it is based on the single context of Bahrain oil and gas, and data were collected from senior management and executives only. Gathering data from a broader swathe of employees may have provided greater levels of leadership and organisational member nuances in both single and collective differences of leadership attributes. </p> <p><strong>Practical implications</strong> – Transformational and Sustainable Network Leadership provides a new construct in the perception (the “what”), instrumentalisation (the “how”) and theoretical re-conceptualisation of leadership within organisational change settings needing radical rethink for sustainable and successful change. The practical implications of transformational and Sustainable Network Leadership expose the way a variety of highly challenged organisational change contexts are interconnected to highlight not only their different sets of challenges but also their opportunities and the resolution mechanisms they present for organisational leaders and staff alike. </p> <p><strong>Originality/value</strong> – This paper identified the single, leadership competence approach as the dominant discourse in organisational change and leadership studies and presented an alternative collective set of leaders’ attributes. The less utilised network leadership concept was drawn upon to contribute network leadership attributes as a way of addressing the challenges faced by Bahraini oil and gas company leaders. Therefore, this study contributes to both network and transformational leadership by expanding both domains to include organisational transformation and the leadership-of-risky change. attributes and characteristics of Sustainable Network Leadership, and then showing their significance as an approach to successfully and sustainably implementing the UNSDGs. </p>

History

School affiliated with

  • College of Arts, Social Sciences, and Humanities (Research Outputs)
  • Department of Management (Research Outputs)
  • Lincoln Business School (Research Outputs)

Publication Title

Journal of Organisational Change Management

Volume

37

Issue

6

Pages/Article Number

1340-1360

Publisher

Emerald

ISSN

0953-4814

Date Submitted

2023-06-08

Date Accepted

2024-06-01

Date of First Publication

2024-07-11

Date of Final Publication

2024-12-06

Date Document First Uploaded

2024-07-11

Publisher statement

This author accepted manuscript is deposited under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-commercial 4.0 International (CC BY-NC) licence. This means that anyone may distribute, adapt, and build upon the work for non-commercial purposes, subject to full attribution. If you wish to use this manuscript for commercial purposes, please contact permissions@emerald.com.

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