International Journal of Servant-Leadership
Abstract
Robert K. Greenleaf coined the term servant-leadership in his seminal 1970 essay, "The Servant as Leader." The servant-leader concept has had a deep and lasting influence over the past three decades on many modern leadership ideas and practices. Greenleaf spent his first career of 40 years at AT&T, retiring as director of management research in 1964. That same year Greenleaf founded The Center for Applied Ethics (later renamed The Greenleaf Center for Servant-Leadership). He went on to have an illustrious 25-year second career as an author, a teacher, and a consultant. Greenleaf, who died in 1990, was the author of numerous books and essays on the theme of the servant as leader. His available published books now include The Servant-Leader Within (2003), Servant Leadership: A Journey into the Nature of Legitimate Power and Greatness (2002, 1977), The Power of Servant-Leadership (1998), On Becoming a Servant-Leader (1996), and Seeker and Servant (1996), along with many other separately published essays that are available through The Greenleaf Center. This essay titled "The Inward Journey" from Greenleaf's Servant Leadership: A Journey into the Nature of Legitimate Power and Greatness contains an elegant, artistic look at the nature of the servant-leader. Here Greenleaf relates how his reading Robert Frost's poem, "Directive," deepened his understanding of the courageous nature of the servant as leader.
Recommended Citation
Greenleaf, Robert K.
(2006)
"Greenleaf on Servant-Leadership: An Inward Journey,"
International Journal of Servant-Leadership: Vol. 2, Article 4.
DOI: 10.33972/ijsl.286
Available at:
https://repository.gonzaga.edu/ijsl/vol2/iss1/4
Copyright Information
Copyright © 2006 The Author(s). All rights reserved