Cities and Spaces of Leadership investigates the interaction between leadership, leaders and spaces at various levels. It analyzes how spaces and places influence leaders and leadership, as well as how the presence, distribution, action, and concentration of leaders in spaces contribute to their transformation.
"This is a truly original contribution to political geography. D'Alessandro and Léautier have brought together two literatures - leadership studies and human geography - to provide a fresh take on agency and context. The key contribution is to show how the career trajectories of 15 Asian and African leaders are influenced by a plethora of spatial factors covering combinations of place, scale, and connections. This very concrete approach to studying political process is a timely challenge to more conventional approaches to understanding relations between space and power." - Peter Taylor, Northumbria University, UK
"Cities and Spaces of Leadership: A Geographical Perspective is a fascinating book demonstrating how a spatial approach gives way to a relevant understanding of leadership building and practices. This approach is very innovative and definitely fruitful. It takes advantage of the huge amount of publications devoted to the various forms and ontologies of spatiality (clarifying the respective meanings of place, network, national territory, urban lived space, personal trajectory, etc.) and explains how they provide analytic tools for understanding the way leaders ground their knowhow in space and with space. The writing is very efficient both in providing a strong conceptual and theoretical background and in illustrating this overall frame with case studies made of a selection of lively individual practices and 'spatial talents' :15global, connected and place-based leaders selected in different parts of the world. A very inspiring way of linking spatiality, political geography and leadership studies.' - Bernard Debarbieux, Université de Genève, Switzerland
"Cities and Spaces of Leadership: A Geographical Perspective is a fascinating book demonstrating how a spatial approach gives way to a relevant understanding of leadership building and practices. This approach is very innovative and definitely fruitful. It takes advantage of the huge amount of publications devoted to the various forms and ontologies of spatiality (clarifying the respective meanings of place, network, national territory, urban lived space, personal trajectory, etc.) and explains how they provide analytic tools for understanding the way leaders ground their knowhow in space and with space. The writing is very efficient both in providing a strong conceptual and theoretical background and in illustrating this overall frame with case studies made of a selection of lively individual practices and 'spatial talents' :15global, connected and place-based leaders selected in different parts of the world. A very inspiring way of linking spatiality, political geography and leadership studies.' - Bernard Debarbieux, Université de Genève, Switzerland