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Leadership and the New Science: Discovering Order in a Chaotic World Paperback – Illustrated, September 3, 2006

4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 381 ratings

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The new edition of the bestselling, acclaimed, and influential guide to applying the new science to organizations and management. In this new edition, Margaret Wheatley describes how the new science radically alters our understanding of the world and how it can teach us to live and work well together in these chaotic times.
 
We live in a time of chaos, rich in potential for new possibilities. A new world is being born. We need new ideas, new ways of seeing, and new relationships to help us now. New science—the new discoveries in biology, chaos theory, and quantum physics that are changing our understanding of how the world works—offers this guidance. It describes a world where chaos is natural, where order exists "for free." It displays the intricate webs of cooperation that connect us. It assures us that life seeks order, but uses messes to get there.
 
This book will teach you how to move with greater certainty and easier grace into the new forms of organizations and communities that are taking shape. You'll learn that:
 
•                Relationships are what matters—even at the subatomic level
•                Life is a vast web of interconnections where cooperation and participation are required
•                Chaos and change are the only route to transformation
 
In this expanded edition, Wheatley provides examples of how non-linear networks and self-organizing systems are flourishing in the modern world. In the midst of turbulence, Wheatley shows, we create work and lives rich in meaning.
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From the Publisher

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Restoring Sanity Who Do We Choose to Be? Perserverance Leadership and the New Science
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More Books from Margaret J. Wheatley Bestselling author Meg Wheatley gives brave leaders the tools to create work conditions that foster generosity, creativity, and kindness in a world of tumultuous and irreversible changes. With gentle but insistent guidance to face reality, this book offers us the path and practices to be sane leaders who know how to evoke people’s inherent generosity, creativity, and kindness. This inspiring and beautifully illustrated book offers guidance to people everywhere for how to persevere through challenges in their personal lives, with their families, at their workplaces, and in their struggles to make a better world. The new edition of the bestselling and influential book describes how the new science radically alters our understanding of the world and how it can teach us to live and work well together in these chaotic times.

Editorial Reviews

Review

“One of the top ten business books of all time.”
—Xerox Business Services Magazine

“Meg Wheatley gave the world a new way of thinking about organizations with her revolutionary application of the natural sciences to business management. . . . Her ideas have found welcome homes in the military, not-for-profit organizations, public schools, health care and churches as well as in corporations. . . .”
—American Society For Training And Development

“A book like
Leadership and the New Science only comes along once in a decade. Margaret Wheatley pushes our thinking about people and organizations to a new dimension. You will never think about organizational life in the same way again.”
—Ken Blanchard, Coauthor Of The One Minute Manager

“If there’s a single book that sets the stage for the future of organizations, this is it . . . Wheatley makes complex ideas simple, and then shows how those simple ideas can be used as powerful tools.”
—Stephen E. Ewing, President And Ceo, Michigan Consolidated Gas Company

Leadership and the New Science surpasses all books to date in management science. It is truly in a class by itself, introducing a standard of excellence in thought and perception against which all other management books and thought will surely be measured.”
—Gerene Schmidt, Founder And Ceo, Science, Business, And Education, Inc.

“If you want to think about change and organizations in an entirely new way . . . Read this book now.”
—John R. Berry, Vice President, Corporate Communications, Herman Miller, Inc.

“Hold onto the top of your head when you read this book. . . . Using exciting breakthroughs in biology, chemistry, and especially quantum physics, Wheatley paints a brand-new picture of business management. This new relationship between business and science is nothing less than an entirely new set of lenses through which to view our organizations.”
Library Journal

“An extraordinary book. The new physics is opening frontiers of knowledge that are among the most significant of this century. Applying these discoveries to management and leadership is extraordinarily eye-opening.”
—Marjorie Kelly, Founder And Publisher, Business Ethics Magazine And Author Of The Divine Right Of Capital

“Years ahead of its time, this daring book will convince you that leaders must substitute their Newtonian mental model for a biological model in organizations of every size. . . . Your employees are already getting hip to this stuff. You’d be wise to catch up.”
The Wall Street Journal

“. . . A thought-provoking work for practitioners and students who are serious about wanting to understand the forces impacting organizations and them- selves, and who desire to move forward to achieve goals and objectives.”
Choice

“A breakthrough. Wheatley has taken leadership to the cutting edge.”
—Marilyn Ferguson, Author Of The Aquarian Conspiracy And Editor Of Brain/Mind
And Common Sense

“A work of immense importance in management and science. . . . [Wheatley] writes about scientific theory with clarity and precision—yet her observations are unfailingly poetic and human.”
The Salt Lake Tribune

“Wheatley’s message is brilliant and it encourages a provocative paradigm shift. Her explanations of quantum theory reduce what could be a mind-boggling complexity into an unpretentious beauty that even a science-challenged person can understand.”
—Andrea Markowitz, Adjunct Professor, University Of Baltimore

Leadership and the New Science is a wonderful book, at once clear and profound, practical yet poetic. It is a lot like the new sciences it describes.”
Timeline

“This beautifully written and compelling book is a gift to many of us who wrestle without the relationship between scientific thinking and organizational life.”
—Judy Sorum Brown, Educator, Writer, And Senior Fellow, Aspen Institute

“A warning to anyone who picks this book up . . . Be prepared to throw out almost everything you think you know about organizations, management, and leadership while reading this book. . . . It is quite literally one of the most interesting books I have ever read.”
Journal For Quality And Participation

“A pioneering voyage of discovery into the essential elegance and simplicity of organizations. This is a book that must be read by any thinking manager, consultant, or professor who wishes to shake loose the shackles of limiting, old-world views and be free to explore the bountiful possibilities of what is in front of us.”
—Jim Kouzes, Coauthor Of The Leadership Challenge And Credibility

“One of the ten books of the decade that are must-reads for information systems professionals.”
Cio Magazine

“Meg Wheatley has a way of helping us to discover that which was there but remained unseen and that which we knew but did not recognize. A great teacher, she makes discovery a joyous and sought-after experience.”
—Edgar Mitchell, Apollo 14 Astronaut And Author Of The Way Of The Explorer

“Any individual involved with organizational leadership needs to read this book.”
Carlson Learning Company Journal

“If you are committed to humane, democratic, and highly productive corporations and communities, you have to pay attention to
Leadership and the New Science. Wheatley’s integration of the new science and its implications for leading organizations are, I believe, at the cutting edge of a whole new theory and practice of organizations badly needing to be born.”
—Marvin Weisbord, author of productive workplaces and discovering common ground, and coauthor of future search

“Wheatley’s new and deep insights are must reading for any management consultant who is serious about making a difference in the world.”
Journal Of Management Consulting

“Beautifully written and produced. A wonderful road map into the new science. . . . It should be on all of our bookshelves, and we should have extra copies available to send to our clients and friends.”
The Chaos Network Newsletter

“Wheatley’s book should be on every manager’s, hrd specialist’s, and OD practioner’s bookshelf, and the concepts therein incorporated into our own understanding of organizations. . . . Even if you reject some of her notions, the book will make you think about what you do, why you do it, and the assumptions, filters, and biases you carry around with you.”
OD Practitioner Journal

“When I was a corporate CEO, I was astonished by
Leadership and the New Science. It affirmed for me that everything in organizational life—indeed I could say in life itself—is about relationships. It was so wise, so insightful, and so abundantly graceful. . . . I frequently call on Meg’s work. She became both teacher and prophet in my mind. And yes, she became and still is, one of my heroes. Her open, wise, and generous spirit is an example for all of us.”
—James Autry, Bestselling Author And Former CEO, Meredith Corporation

“This is one of those seminal books that, once read, can continue to live on in the psyche, reshaping one’s world-view permanently. To borrow an image from one of the new sciences contemplated in the book, it may well be like the butterfly in Tokyo whose flapping wings generate a tornado in Texas; it may fan subtle winds of change that eventually amass enough energy to transform corporate organizations into systems barely recognizable to us today.”
The Advocate Newsletter

“I read
Leadership and the New Science with fascination and awe. . . . It is one of the most provocative and exciting books I have read in years.”
—H. Thomas Johnson, Retzlaff professor of quality management, Portland State University

“This is one of the most wonderful books I have ever read. It is a work of art. Wheatley’s writing style and communication of ideas have such underlying elegance that they demonstrate what she is writing about—again and again in myriad ways.”
Barbara Shipka, author of leadership in a challenging world

“I would never have guessed that any book could have held me in such fascination as has leadership and the new science. . . . It will enrich the lives of everyone who reads it.”
—Rosemarie Liebmann, Adjunct Professor, Seton Hall University

“Having just finished
Leadership and the New Science, I am compelled to write to tell you what a great impact it has had on my thinking . . . Once I got started reading it, I could not put it down. I also started highlighting the ‘re-ally good’ stuff, and your entire book is now green neon. The metaphors you have used are so powerful and created such vivid images in my head that they are now indelibly imprinted there.”
—Michael F. Werneke, Manager, Human Resource Development, Cytec Industries

Leadership and the New Science is the best book on organizational leadership that i have read in ten years. It reminds me of the life magazine issue devoted to Picasso. That excited me like few other things. I could not put it down. It captured my imagination and led me to a new plane for living and working. . . . That is what happened with Wheatley’s book. It has the same kind of vision and uniqueness. It predicts the future and explains the present like only artists can. This book has helped me impart to others a totally unique kind of trust and courage that works, but seems to go completely contrary to the grain. Simply, it is exquisite.”
Lee M. Hogan, President, Lee Hogan & Associates, And Member Of The Board Of Directors Of Associated Consultants International

“Wheatley’s interpretation of the ‘new science’—quantum physics, biology, and chaos theory—into the organizing concepts of work and productivity is pure genius.”
The New Leaders

“The work you do in the world is a wonder, Meg—so upstream to the way things appear on the surface, but so in harmony with deep-down dynamics of reality. It is a source of great joy to me to think that I have had a small part in the great work you do.”
—Parker Palmer, Educator And Author

“Meg Wheatley’s pioneering insights into the self-organizing nature of our world have been remarkably well supported by recent advances in the new sciences. But what really makes leadership and the new science so enduring is that it offers us a solid place to stand amidst the chaos and complexity. We need this book more than ever.”
—Allan Cohen, Former Senior Vice President, Zefer, Former Coo, Waite & Company

“I admire the clarity, beauty, and passion with which you travel your chosen path. Without question, you are having considerable impact both here and abroad.”
—Robert Tannenbaum, A Founder Of The Field Of Od

“I believe that if this book was translated into Russian, it would make an invaluable contribution to our modern culture. It has made a huge impression on me not only for its simple, natural words, but the sense of novelty, and singularity of approach. This book for me was certainly a revelation, one of those books that make it worthwhile to study English.”
—Mikhail Kutyrev, Russia, Former Fishing Fleet Captain

“I’ve spent the last few days devouring
Leadership and the New Science, eulogizing about it to my wife, commenting to the friend who lent me the book. ‘I’m not sure if it is true, but I really want it to be.’ the truth of the matter is that much of what you have written I instinctively know to be true but I have never had quite the words to express it.”
—Steve Clifford, Leadership Development Consultant, England

“I was inspired and provoked by your writings to adapt your concepts to the situation of incarcerated individuals. . . . My work is with alcoholics and chemically abusing or addicted individuals. I believe your concepts are a perfect vehicle to reach people who are stuck in denial . . . And your concepts help provide information in a non-threatening and easily understood manner.”
—Diana Arostegui, Washington

“Your book speaks to me and I speak to it. I am a practicing lawyer, now almost 75. . . . I always feel the interconnections of everything and the joy of uncertainty and unknowing and am always excited about ideas that I had never thought of and couldn’t have by myself.”
—Dorothy Stulberg, Tennessee

“When we can get people to perceive our organizations differently, they are better able to relate to one another in them. Here is where I find that the ‘secular’ insights of your book and the ‘spiritual’ notion of communion are powerful complements to one another. Your simplicity, your directness, and your imagination combine to provide insights that are accessible and compelling.”
—M.B. (Jerry) Handspicker, Professor Of Pastoral Theology (Emeritus), Andover Newton Theological School

Leadership and the New Science . . . Is one of those books that held me spellbound with every turn of the page. I felt a keen sense of disappointment when I realized I had come to the last page. You have a gift, Margaret Wheatley, and I am grateful beyond my ability to express that I have been a recipient of it.”
—Maura Jones, North Dakota

“. . . I am very encouraged that there is still reason to believe ardently in the great resilience of the human spirit to re-invent itself over and over again, whether we view it fractally or as the first signs of a dawning and long awaited millennium of harmony and happiness for everyone. Perhaps what you are de-scribing is the forerunner not only of new leadership skills and deeper understanding one of another, but also the advent of greater openness of mind and genuine honesty between us all at all levels of communication.”
Reverend Mary Fourchalk, B.C., Canada

About the Author

Margeret Wheatley, EdD, writes, teaches and speaks about how to restore hope and sanity to organizations. She has been a management professor and consultant since 1973. She travels the world willingly in support of life-affirming leaders everywhere.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Berrett-Koehler Publishers; 3rd edition (September 3, 2006)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Paperback ‏ : ‎ 248 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1576753441
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1576753446
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 1.04 pounds
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 7.44 x 0.62 x 9.06 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    4.4 4.4 out of 5 stars 381 ratings

About the author

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Margaret J. Wheatley
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Approaching 80, I look back and see what a rich and blessed life I’ve had. I’ve been able to give my curiosity free rein and to be with extraordinary teachers and companions. I’ve been able to explore a wide range of disciplines, lived in several different cultures, and raised a large family. I’ve learned from an incredible diversity of people, from Indigenous peoples to the Dalai Lama, from small town ministers to senior government ministers, from leading scientists to National Park rangers, from engaged activists to solitary monastics. This access to so many sources of experience and wisdom, held in the container of friendship, continues to deepen my resolve to bring whatever I’m learning into my books and teachings.

I had an excellent liberal arts education at the University of Rochester and University College London. I served in the Peace Corps in Korea, 1966-1968, learning to thrive in a post-war, traditional culture where everything was different, teaching junior and senior high school English (minimum class size was 65). My M.A. is from New York University in Media Ecology with Neil Postman. My doctorate is from Harvard’s program in Administration, Planning, and Social Policy, focused on organizational behavior and change.

I have been a consultant and speaker since 1973, working with all types of organizations and peoples, on all continents (except Antarctica). Working in so many different places, it’s been easy to recognize patterns of behavior common across cultural and institutional differences, and to also note behaviors and worldviews specific to different cultures. And it has kept me alert to changing trends in leadership.

I was full-time faculty in two graduate management programs, Cambridge College, Cambridge, Massachusetts, and The Marriott School of Management, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah. I’ve been a formal advisor for leadership programs in England, Croatia, Denmark, Australia and the United States and, in Berkana, with leadership initiatives in India, Senegal, Zimbabwe, South Africa, Mexico, Brazil, Greece, Canada, and Europe. I was a formal advisor to the Director of the National Park System for ten years, a highlight in my career.

I am co-founder and president of The Berkana Institute, a global nonprofit founded in 1991. I am very proud of our decades of experimentation and support of life-affirming leaders everywhere. Explore our rich and varied history at www.berkana.org

My most creative work is The Warrior’s Songline, A Journey Guided by Voice and Sound (2020). In collaboration with musician Jerry Granelli, this new form melds voice and sound to create an evocative and transcendent experience that introduces listeners to the Warrior’s Path. https://margaretwheatley.com/the-warriors-songline/

I’ve written nine books and dozens of articles (free on my website). My writings have been an invitation to explore new ways of leading based on wisdom drawn from new science, history, archeology, cosmology and many spiritual traditions. I’ve sought to apply this rich and crucial wisdom to the challenges of leadership and how people can live well together as community, no matter what’s happening in external circumstances.

I’ve received several awards and honorary doctorates. In 2003, The American Society for Training and Development (ASTD) honored me for my contribution “to workplace learning and development” and dubbed me “a living legend.” In April 2005, I was elected to the Leonardo Da Vinci Society for the Study of Thinking for my contribution to the development of the field of systems thinking. I was inducted into the International Leadership Association’s Hall of Fame in 2014.

I was raised in New York and then lived in Boston area. Since 1989, I’ve lived happily in Utah. I have two adult sons and five stepchildren, all seven from the same father. I have dozens of grandchildren and great grandchildren, most of whom live in Utah. I am held by the guardian mountains of Utah and frequently seek renewal in red rock canyons just a few hours away. My peaceful mountain home supports me to do my work and to take frequent brief spiritual retreats. My spiritual teachers’ guidance keeps deepening my spiritual practice, and I delight in the close proximity of beloved family.

To keep current with my work, see: https://margaretwheatley.com/library/current-thinking/

Books by Margaret Wheatley

Who Do We Choose To Be: Facing Reality|Claiming Leadership|Restoring Sanity

The Warrior’s Songline: A Journey Guided by Voice and Sound

How Does Raven Know? Entering Sacred World: A Meditative Memoir

Walk Out Walk On: A Learning Journey into Communities Daring to Live the Future Now. Coauthored with Deborah Frieze

Perseverance

Finding Our Way: Leadership for an Uncertain Time

Turning to One Another: Simple Conversations to Restore Hope to the Future

A Simpler Way. Coauthored with Myron Kellner-Rogers

Leadership and the New Science.

Customer reviews

4.4 out of 5 stars
4.4 out of 5
381 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on August 8, 2011
Though I've never met her, Dr. Wheatley has been mentoring me for nearly 20 years with her profound insights into organic, agile living and working. This book and Margaret Wheatley herself through all her books have inspired me for over 20 years. I found out at the age of 48 that I had ADHD. I know realize that her book probably helped me develop compensatory strategies. ADHD means learning to live with chaos from the inside and the outside. I re-read her book recently and to me, it's like if you did a word search and replaced organizational leadership with self leadership, she could be describing how to live with ADHD.

Her guidance on structuring organizations is directly relevant to structuring your life. Life today, even if you don't have ADHD is all about learning how to live when you can't control anything. All you can really do is learn to keep adapting - to live "agile". Dr. Wheatley helped me understand that life is really about continuously finding the natural order within what seems to be chaos so that you can relax and evolve with it rather than seek to control it.

I first published a review of her book and the video that was made from it in 1994. In 2011 it remains one of the best books of thousands I have read for use in both personal and organizational leadership, learning and development.

Here is my updated review of the book.

Leadership and The New Science presents refreshingly innovative, thought-provoking ideas and perspectives on how leading edge discoveries from the world of natural science can be applied to help individuals and organizations become more adaptable in the face of constant change and achieve new levels of order and effectiveness.

Dr. Wheatley discusses how natural systems, such as clouds, (and people) are able to fulfill their missions without precise predictability, and amidst seemingly chaotic conditions.

Dr. Wheatley then provides insight on how our new understandings of nature can help us in creating the organization of the future--organizations that can respond and adapt to chaotic change over time and yet achieve a common purpose.

[To me, this is exactly what we as individuals need today more than ever. The skills to respond and adapt to the chaos of our constantly changing life circumstances, technology, culture, the economy, and the rapid pace of knowledge dissemination that the internet is enabling even our changing bodies and health present challenges to our ability to cope with change.]

Her basic premise is that today's organizations are products of 17th century paradigms of the universe which led to a "machine model" of the world. The "machine model" emphasizes a view that the world is made up of discrete parts, which put together and controlled properly will operate efficiently. According to Wheatley, the "machine model" is breaking down.

The new sciences, such as evolutionary biology and quantum mechanics have revealed that the world is far more chaotic than we have ever imagined, and ultimately not very controllable or predictable. Survival in the "new world" will require a new way of viewing the relationship of order to chaos.

Unpredictable relationships, not order, are at the very core of everything. Weather, for example, is unpredictable from moment to moment, but over time, it conforms to certain boundaries. It is caused by the myriad of relationships among the movement of the earth, natural disasters, man-made interventions such as pollution, etc.

While the "chaotic" interaction and relationships of all the forces contributing to weather cannot be accurately predicted, certain boundaries, such as seasonal patterns, do provide a certain order. It is within these boundaries that weather occurs.

In new science terms, chaos is defined as "order without predictability". Unpredictable relationships among the elements are at the core - they determine what will be. Dr. Wheatley's premise is that, to survive, the organizations and people of the 21st century must reinvent themselves, and incorporate these natural lessons in the way their lives and organizational systems are structured.

The rapidly changing context in which we operate will require that we evolve from the "machine model" view of ourselves into "natural systems" -- in which order is NOT imposed from without, but rather develops from within.

Leading organizations of the future will grow and develop in a much more natural way--much like human beings develop. The development of human beings occurs within the boundaries of genetic makeup, but within this "order" or boundary, individuals are shaped, unpredictably, by their internal responses and relationships to their environments.

Just as we learn who we are in relationship to others, so will organizations of the future find that their visions and missions will emerge from teams and the interactions of those teams as they respond to their contexts.

According to Dr. Wheatley, the new organizational structure will emerge from four critical elements:

1) The acceptance of chaos (order without predictability) as an essential process by which natural systems, including organizations and individuals, renew and revitalize themselves. Chaos is necessary for creativity to flourish.

2) The free flow of information (AKA Organizational DNA), which is the life blood and energy source that leads to continual reorganization and creativity in response to the environment. [The internet's role in facilitating this is obvious.]

3) The development of positive, constructive relationships among its members, and with the environment.

4) The ability to create a "field of vision"-- a force that serves to energize the organization and provide the boundaries within which chaos, information flow, and relationships occur.

Having reviewed hundreds of books and materials for use in leadership and management training that provide only superficial understanding of the significance of change and/or a laundry list of "how tos" for coping with change, Dr. Wheatley's message is refreshingly inspirational and thought-provoking.

Her work provides the clear and substantive rationale needed to evoke a paradigm shift in the way we view change, ourselves, and the organizations in which we work.

I can't recommend her work highly enough for use in leadership development or other programs designed to help people understand, accept, and participate in the changes taking place in their organizations and in their personal lives as well.

It really strikes me that almost 20 years ago when I first read Wheatley's work in my early 30's, I understood it and thought I "knew" it. But only in the last 5 years have I truly been able to develop the details that allow me to really get it at a level that I am able to apply the lessons in all areas of my daily life and not just to my professional life.

I wrote above

"Just as we learn who we are in relationship to others, so will organizations of the future find that their visions and missions will emerge from teams and the interactions of those teams as they respond to their contexts."

It's not easy to live with such relentless dynamism, but it is the natural way. When we stop trying to live as if we were machines that could control our lives, the sense of peace is stunning. The ups and the downs of life are so much more tolerable, the grief process itself is transformed. Adapting to constant change requires you to find the place where letting go is just as easy as acquiring.

Finding the place where you can commit fully to what you have in your life, while also being to let it go at any time. That is the true freedom that comes with finding your oneness with the natural flow of life.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 19, 2010
I, first, read this book as part of an assignment in an educational administration program. One of my mentors kept telling me that "everything is connected to everything else" and through my spiritual program I knew that "everything happens for a reason." Further, my philosophy was based on the belief that everyone works to the edges of their understanding and capacity at all times. I knew that people can only be inspired, committed and motivated when working in a safe, supportive, challenging and engaging environment. This meant to me that leadership through fear, intimidation and dictums could never work and was immoral, insensitive, inhumane, inefficient and certainly not effective. This book provided a scientific, data-based basis to my beliefs and practices. I was inspired by Wheatley's vision and research about transforming organizations in alignment with how the physical world actually performs, ie., a logical, predictable and affirming environment.

I have continued to align my leadership work with what I learned from reading Leadership and the New Science. I absolutely trust my thinking and emotions if they are in harmony with Wheatley's evidence of how things work. The people for whom I have leadership responsibility can relax, enjoy and work to their maximum potential under this belief system. They trust that my leadership will be consistent in philosophy and style, based on science, as well as, spirituality, support their work and provide guidance which adds value to their working conditions and assignment; never add unrealistic expectations, complex and overly complicated processes and/or workload to their assignment.

I am now re-reading this book with a group of colleagues in a dysfunctional, irrational, situational-based ethics and mean-spirited organization. My hope is that reading and discussing this book will re-affirm and re-energize my colleagues towards accepting reality and believing, again, in their power to make a positive difference in this educational organization.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 27, 2014
Fascinating book that challenges the notion that organizations and people are best managed rather than provided meaning and independence to solve the changing reality. The author uses nature as its model and relationships that have the most impact. Never a fan of organizational charts I found this reinforcing. Using the terrorists organizations and the helpers in the Katrina disaster as examples drives it home. Occasionally the science comparisons can be a bit slow for those of us who want a quick silver bullet answer which is never forth coming. Recommended for those already in leadership positions which is everyone in some way or another.
Marshall Steele MD
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Top reviews from other countries

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Florence M.
5.0 out of 5 stars Extraordinary book
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on April 13, 2024
As a Business Psychologist I am interested in the science of behaviour and how to help people to maximise their strengths. Margaret Wheatley explains how to do just that. It is a book I go back to time and again.
Eelco Toxopeus
5.0 out of 5 stars Een van de beste in zijn categorie - verplichte literatuur !!
Reviewed in the Netherlands on March 11, 2023
Een erg mooie en goed uitgewerkte weergave van de toepassing van de nieuwe inzichten in bedrijfskunde en leiderschap.
Simon Kardynal
5.0 out of 5 stars Wonderful
Reviewed in Canada on April 23, 2020
This book delves into the world of chaos leadership and provides important insight.
Heriberto Garcia
5.0 out of 5 stars Diferente
Reviewed in Mexico on October 25, 2019
Muy buen libro, relaciona de forma interesante la nueva ciencia con el liderazgo, punto de vista diferente pero innovador
Juan Benitez Panero
5.0 out of 5 stars other times completely amazed! defies many of my ways of thinking and ...
Reviewed in Canada on June 13, 2016
for me an unbelievable challenge! sometimes shocked, other times completely amazed! defies many of my ways of thinking and interpreting the world! if you want to review and re create yourself, I deeply recommend reading it!
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