Going with our "gut" has served us in the past (though we tend to forget when it has not). But when we don't do our homework, intuition can fail. In our personal lives, the damage might be limited. For leaders, the consequences can be catastrophic.
Terry Newell is currently director of his own firm, Leadership for a Responsible Society. His work focuses on values-based leadership, ethics, and decision making. A former Air Force officer, Terry also previously served as Director of the Horace Mann Learning Center, the training arm of the U.S. Department of Education, and as Dean of Faculty at the Federal Executive Institute. Terry is co-editor and author of The Trusted Leader: Building the Relationships That Make Government Work (CQ Press, 2011). He also wrote Statesmanship, Character and Leadership in America (Palgrave Macmillan, 2013) and To Serve with Honor: Doing the Right Thing in Government (Loftlands Press 2015).
Going with our "gut" has served us in the past (though we tend to forget when it has not). But when we don't do our homework, intuition can fail. In our personal lives, the damage might be limited. For leaders, the consequences can be catastrophic.
Jobs matter, but so does meaningful work. As technology and globalization advance, we will be challenged to create both.
Perfect institutions cannot be expected from inherently imperfect people. But our major, national institutions can be better. Strengthening them must begin with action to restore the primacy of moral values and ethical behavior in institutional life.
Delegitimizing American institutions appears to be a conscious strategy of the Trump campaign.
The theatrical film, Hell or High Water, by design or coincidence, offers a useful vehicle for an important national concern. What do we do when the law and justice conflict?
Those tempted to send nasty tweets or hurl hate at others, should think not just about how good it feels but about what good it does. Tearing us apart to save us is irresponsible. Freedom demands more.
Questions about how candidates understand the Constitution are almost never asked. No one gets to be the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs without understanding the oath of office and the history of subordinating military to civilian authority, yet one can become Commander in Chief without even reading the Constitution.
Politicization hardens the societal arteries. Politics has its place, but when it warps our thinking and institutions, it risks the healthy society which is its sole purpose.
It is easy to tear down international unions, especially when you take no responsibility for articulating how else to achieve the same ends they are designed to address. Going it alone has led to two world wars. We should learn from that experience.
In our current culture, with its emphasis on "me," the film Me Before You offers homage to the transforming power of focusing outside ourselves.
Falling in love is the easy part. But staying in love - protecting and building a marriage - is harder.
A sense of humor today is essential for leaders, yet no one seems to think that politics and public life have a place for healing humor. By itself, it won't cure our ills, but it could be useful medicine.
Research suggests that the emotional parts of the brain often fire before those of the rational neocortex. In short, our logical brain helps our emotional brain justify itself. The implications are sobering.
The public health crisis due to high lead levels in the water supply of Flint, Michigan claimed many victims. This did not have to happen if those in government had been guided by their moral responsibility to those they serve.
Sound judgment is by no means the only capability essential in a president, but it is the one capability whose absence we accept at our peril.
When we get our facts correct and integrate them appropriately with our feelings, our actions can help wonderful things happen. But when we act on feelings alone, as if they are facts, we have only half of what we need to build good lives and strong societies.
Why do we think someone can be president with no training or experience in politics? Indeed, the lack of both seems to many voters a plus.
Science - and scientists - in real life often get much less respect. How can we explain this disconnect?
Religion and politics share a joint interest - fostering healthy people, families, and communities. Yet religious values are often ignored in fostering or opposing political views.
Anger seems plentiful in America. While it has uses, it can be easily overdone, degrading our personal and civic lives.