TY - JOUR
T1 - Leadership models for team dynamics and cohesion
T2 - The mars mission
AU - Yammarino, Francis J.
AU - Mumford, Michael D.
AU - Connelly, M. Shane
AU - Day, Eric Anthony
AU - Gibson, Carter
AU - McIntosh, Tristan
AU - Mulhearn, Tyler
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 by Emerald Group Publishing Limited.
PY - 2015
Y1 - 2015
N2 - In this chapter, we view team cohesion from a more generalized perspective of team dynamics, and focus on four leadership models for understanding these dynamics in teams in the context of the Mars Mission. Given the long duration of the mission with periods of no or intermittent communication and support, isolation and confinement, and the risk of great physical and psychological harm, having tailored leadership models for this unique team dynamics context is critical. And yet, many of these same dangerous conditions occur in other contexts such as for first responders, crisis management teams, Special Forces operations, and scientific exploration teams in extreme environments. As such, building from a model of leadership and team dynamics for dangerous contexts, for a long-duration space mission involving both Mission Control and the Astronaut Crew, these models of leadership and team dynamics include a collective-level approach for scientists and engineers, a primarily crewbased socioemotional approach, a leader-level crisis/emergency approach, and a dyadic or sortie-level approach. Implications of these models for effective leadership in building and maintaining team dynamics and cohesion for the Mars Mission and across a variety of other dangerous and extreme contexts are discussed.
AB - In this chapter, we view team cohesion from a more generalized perspective of team dynamics, and focus on four leadership models for understanding these dynamics in teams in the context of the Mars Mission. Given the long duration of the mission with periods of no or intermittent communication and support, isolation and confinement, and the risk of great physical and psychological harm, having tailored leadership models for this unique team dynamics context is critical. And yet, many of these same dangerous conditions occur in other contexts such as for first responders, crisis management teams, Special Forces operations, and scientific exploration teams in extreme environments. As such, building from a model of leadership and team dynamics for dangerous contexts, for a long-duration space mission involving both Mission Control and the Astronaut Crew, these models of leadership and team dynamics include a collective-level approach for scientists and engineers, a primarily crewbased socioemotional approach, a leader-level crisis/emergency approach, and a dyadic or sortie-level approach. Implications of these models for effective leadership in building and maintaining team dynamics and cohesion for the Mars Mission and across a variety of other dangerous and extreme contexts are discussed.
KW - Dangerous contexts
KW - Leadership models
KW - Mars Mission
KW - Team dynamics
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/84947749359
U2 - 10.1108/S1534-085620150000017009
DO - 10.1108/S1534-085620150000017009
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84947749359
SN - 1534-0856
VL - 17
SP - 213
EP - 245
JO - Research on Managing Groups and Teams
JF - Research on Managing Groups and Teams
ER -