TY - JOUR
T1 - School leadership, communities and crises
T2 - a collaborative autoethnographic exploration of humanism as professional and community capital
AU - Sum, Nicola
AU - Lahiri-Roy, Reshmi
AU - Culton, Wilma
AU - Gough, Lisa
AU - Koziaris, Helen
AU - Strain, Edward
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025, Nicola Sum, Reshmi Lahiri-Roy, Wilma Culton, Lisa Gough, Helen Koziaris and Edward Strain.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Purpose: This article bridges research and practice spaces to consider diverse school leadership experiences and expertise, through a collaborative autoethnography (CAE) of a sextet of contributors, to explore humanist approaches as foundational to leaders’ professional capital and their engagement with community during crises. Design/methodology/approach: We use CAE as a methodology to explore the relationship of school leaders and their communities, impacted by crises and considered through a lens of Freirean humanisation. Findings: Dialogic collaboration generated discussion on the nature of professional and community capital in the context of crisis. Key themes include the significance of humanism in accounting for the temporality of preparedness, the fragility of social connections and the sustainability of human thriving within schools and across communities. Originality/value: This paper decentres the dualism in leadership research, between practitioner and researcher spaces, to inform a more nuanced understanding of the strengths inherent in a humanist approach to school leadership, which in turn supports community capital in the face of crises.
AB - Purpose: This article bridges research and practice spaces to consider diverse school leadership experiences and expertise, through a collaborative autoethnography (CAE) of a sextet of contributors, to explore humanist approaches as foundational to leaders’ professional capital and their engagement with community during crises. Design/methodology/approach: We use CAE as a methodology to explore the relationship of school leaders and their communities, impacted by crises and considered through a lens of Freirean humanisation. Findings: Dialogic collaboration generated discussion on the nature of professional and community capital in the context of crisis. Key themes include the significance of humanism in accounting for the temporality of preparedness, the fragility of social connections and the sustainability of human thriving within schools and across communities. Originality/value: This paper decentres the dualism in leadership research, between practitioner and researcher spaces, to inform a more nuanced understanding of the strengths inherent in a humanist approach to school leadership, which in turn supports community capital in the face of crises.
KW - Collaborative autoethnography
KW - Crisis leadership
KW - Educational leadership
KW - Humanism
KW - Professional capital
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105000632246&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1108/QRJ-12-2024-0298
DO - 10.1108/QRJ-12-2024-0298
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105000632246
SN - 1443-9883
JO - Qualitative Research Journal
JF - Qualitative Research Journal
ER -