Being Aware of Death: How and when Mortality Cues Incite Leader Expediency Versus Servant Leadership Behaviour

Author:

Ogbonnaya Chidiebere1,Babalola Mayowa T.2,Ali Moazzam3,Ren Shuang4,Usman Muhammed5,Wang Zhining6

Affiliation:

1. University of Kent

2. University of Western Australia

3. University of Okara

4. Queen's University Belfast

5. University of Sharjah

6. China University of Mining and Technology

Abstract

AbstractThe COVID‐19 crisis has been associated with existential concerns regarding mortality. These concerns, described as ‘mortality cues’, can influence people's emotions, behaviours, and the quality of leadership in organizations. Using the contingency model of death awareness (CMDA; Grant and Wade‐Benzoni, 2009), we provide new evidence on how mortality cues can incite negative and positive leadership behaviours via two forms of death awareness: death anxiety and death reflection. Specifically, we theorize that mortality cues can increase leader death anxiety, giving rise to leader expediency (a leader's use of unethical practices to expedite work for self‐serving purposes); however, mortality cues can also facilitate leader death reflection and, consequently, servant leadership behaviour. We further suggest that leaders’ responses to mortality cues depend on their psychological capital (PsyCap), such that leaders with high (vs. low) PsyCap respond to mortality cues with less expediency (via death anxiety) and more servant leader behaviours (via death reflection). We support our hypotheses through three separate studies using an experiment, time‐lagged data from healthcare workers, and daily diary data from non‐healthcare professionals. We conclude that mortality cues have a double‐edged influence on leadership behaviour. We also discuss the theoretical and practical implications of the findings.

Publisher

Wiley

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