Sample Dissertations
Recent Dissertations
Dr. Marcus McChristian, 2023
A Qualitative Study Exploring the Cultural Adaptation of U.S. Diplomatic Leaders Working in Africa
The United States government relies upon diplomatic leaders to promote and protect the interest of U.S. citizens all over the world. To successfully carry out these duties, diplomatic leaders are required to establish, build, and maintain relationships with individuals who often have different beliefs, standards, and opinions about how policies and decisions are made. U.S. diplomatic leaders must be able to integrate themselves culturally while managing unavoidable conflict. This study provides information about diplomatic leaders’ conflict management style choices while working in Africa, the most culturally diverse continent in the world. Diplomatic leaders’ ability to integrate into these new cultures and manage conflict while working in African environments often determines their capability to successfully lead host-country nationals and work with local government officials to accomplish U.S. foreign policy agenda.
Dr. Philip Smith, 2022
Bahamian Police Leadership and Organizational Culture through a Transformational Leadership Lens
Bahamian leadership throughout history has needed to create a culture of efficiency at fighting global crime (United States Embassy Nassau, 2014). The purpose of this inductive qualitative case study was to understand the organizational culture of the Bahamian Police force as attendees of the International Law Enforcement Academy (ILEA) leadership training. This study explored the organizational culture of participants who graduated from ILEA training and non-attendees. This study explored how leaders within the Royal Bahamian Police force (RBPF) may have influenced organizational traditions and practices. This study employed an inductive qualitative case study methodology that utilized purposive non-probability sampling.Semistructured interviews with open-ended questions provided the narrative data while the ILEA training module and RBPF website provided the supporting evidence. The interview questions explored participant perceptions of leadership behaviors within the RBPF. This study applied a transformational leadership theory lens to describe the Royal Bahamian police organizational culture. Findings revealed that the RBPF leaders had created change within their organizational culture to reflect transformational leadership theory.
Dr. Katie Parrish, 2022
Mainstream Preservice Teachers\ Perceived Readiness in Knowledge, Skills, and Dispositions to Educate English Learners
This study investigated how mainstream preservice teachers in educator preparation programs (EPPs) in the State of Indiana feel they are ready to meet the growing EL population’s needs. Further, the study investigated how EPP faculty perceive the readiness to educate ELs of the mainstream preservice teachers they prepare. Additionally, this study compared how mainstream preservice teachers and EPP faculty perceive the readiness to educate ELs in knowledge, skills, and dispositions. Using a quantitative, nonexperimental comparative approach, this study explicitly describes how mainstream preservice teachers perceive their readiness to educate ELs’ knowledge, skills, and dispositions. Past literature supports the increase in the EL population, the achievement gap between ELs and their non-EL peers, and a despairing representation of mainstream teachers who hold EL certification to support the academic growth of this increasing population of learners. The results of this study identify the perception of readiness of mainstream preservice teachers and the perception of readiness as evaluated by EPP faculty for the mainstream preservice teachers they prepare in knowledge, skills, and dispositions to educate ELs. Overall, the results showed that mainstream preservice teachers and EPP faculty do not perceive the mainstream preservice teachers ready to educate ELs. The results were the same for the areas of knowledge, skills, and dispositions. The current findings, grounded in the complexity leadership theory, support the notion that EPPs are complex adaptive systems and must respond to the need to integrate EL coursework throughout educator preparation programs to prepare mainstream preservice teachers to educate ELs effectively upon program completion.
Dr. Priscilla Deleon, 2022
A Case Study of Global Leadership in Allied Health: Supporting the Enhancement of Employees’ Engagement and Job Satisfaction
Global allied health leaders play a key role in promoting health and wellbeing for their employees. This study contributes to exploring how global leaders in allied health support employees’ job satisfaction and levels of engagement. This study used a qualitative methodology, employing a case study research design to explore servant leadership and allied health leaders; specifically, whether servant leadership plays a role in job satisfaction and employee engagement. The main component of the theoretical framework used for this study was Greenleaf’s (1970) servant leadership. The findings of this study offered five themes that emerged from the data: importance of leadership, listening and communication, building teams to be successful, job satisfaction and making a difference on the job, and professional development increases job satisfaction. The results of this study may create an opportunity for global allied health leaders to explore whether the characteristics of a servant leader can support employee engagement and job satisfaction in allied health fields
Dr. Saju Alex, 2022
A Phenomenological Study Exploring Global IT Companies in India: Lessons of Experiences on Sustainability
This qualitative study aimed to understand how sustainability leaders in India’s Information Technology (IT) industry perceived the sustainability leader development phenomenon. The four concepts constructed the theoretical framework for the study were: (1) leadership development, (2) sustainability, (3) values-based leadership, and (4) moral development. In addition, the study was framed by a constructivist paradigm, utilizing descriptive phenomenological methodology. The purposeful sampling criteria outlined by Moustakas (1994) were used for participant selection. Ten participants who worked in senior-level management positions at different IT companies and had experience in sustainability ranging from four to eleven years were selected. The data was collected through informal and interactive interviews using open-ended questions.The data were analyzed according to the transcendental phenomenological analysis processes Moustakas (1994) recommended. As a result, seven themes emerged from the participants’ textural descriptions of how they experienced the phenomenon: (1) leadership development, (2) workforce/professional development, (3) global competitiveness, (4) vision and values, (4) sustainability strategies/development, (6) organizational culture, and (7) it’s all about economics. The findings contributed to scholarship an understanding of sustainability leadership development and corroborated global leadership. However, the participants did not comment enough on the environment and social components of sustainable development to emerge as significant themes. As I pointed out, future research should focus on how or why the disconnect came about?
Dr. Kimberly Lehman, 2022
Immigration as an Antecedent for Changes in Leadership Behavior: A Study of How Buddhist Leaders’ Immigration from Myanmar to Indiana Affected Their Self-reported Leadership Behaviors
This qualitative, phenomenological study examined the perceptions of Buddhist leaders to understand if and how these leaders perceived their own leadership behaviors changed as a result of immigrating from Myanmar to Indiana. Between 2006 and 2014, there have been more than7,000 Buddhists who have immigrated to Indiana largely because of civil war and unrest in their home country (Centers for Disease Control and Prevention [CDC], n.d.). This substantial migration of refugees has led to the building of several new Buddhist facilities to support their transition. This study used Liden et al.’s (2008) model of servant leadership as a theoretical framework to better understand this phenomenon. This model of servant leadership includes antecedents, behaviors, and outcomes as a framework to examine the process of servant leadership. The model is appropriate for instances with varying antecedent conditions and in this study, the antecedents of context and culture changed when Buddhist leaders immigrated from Myanmar to Indiana. The data set for this study was a group of six Buddhist leaders who immigrated from Myanmar to Indiana and who are leading congregations in Indiana. The qualitative data for this study was gathered via semistructured interviews with Buddhist leaders who met the requirements outlined in this dissertation with an aim to understand these leaders’ self-perceptions of changes in leadership behaviors. The qualitative data obtained in the interviews was analyzed to understand which, if any, of the seven servant leadership behaviors outlined in Liden et al.’s (2008) model of servant leadership changed and, if so, how they changed. This study contributed to a better understanding of immigrant leader behaviors and servant leadership behaviors in international populations whose context and culture for leading changed as a result of immigrating to a new country. The study also has local significance for Indiana’s religious leaders (Buddhist as well as other faiths), civic leaders, and refugee populations.
Dr. Lizzie Bronte, 2022
A Phenomenological Study Exploring the Lived Experiences of Women Leaders in Information Technology in Nairobi, Kenya
There have been few studies on the experiences of African women in leadership and minimal research in the field of technology. While the number of women in leadership has steadily increased across most industries, this has not occurred in the information technology (IT) industry, especially in the continent of Africa. The IT industry has had slow growth in women’s progression into leadership positions. Studies that examine women and career advancement in technology note barriers to women’s development, including gender bias, lack of interest by women after midcareer, rapidly changing IT trends, lack of trust by male leaders, and cultural biases towards women leaders; these barriers explain the global shortage of women as IT leaders (e.g., Madsen, 2017; Sample, 2018). This qualitative phenomenological study aimed to explore the lived experiences of women leaders who work in IT companies in Kenya. This study explored the characteristics of African women’s lived experiences in their roles as leaders in a volatile and complex IT environment. The study explored the challenges encountered through their journey and how they overcame these challenges, including the support they may have received that enabled them along the way. The researcher used ten broad questions to explore women’s lived experiences in Kenya. The research findings validated the literature in certain areas and revealed opportunities for future research in unexpected places. In Kenya, women leaders in IT were a minority who experienced gender bias due to patriarchal beliefs and cultural expectations for women, inequalities, and prejudice in a male-dominated industry. An unexpected finding of imposter syndrome revealed that women limited themselves due to their beliefs of not being good enough to compete with men. Overcoming these challenges required proactive behaviors such as developing competence, mentoring, and networking with men and women to understand and excel in the workplace.
Dr. Henry King, 2022
A Case Study Exploring How Culturally Intelligent Transformational Higher Education Leaders Foster Organizational Innovations in a Multicultural Student Environment
The purpose of this qualitative single case study was to explore how higher education leaders at a public university in the Southeast United States employed cultural intelligence and transformational leadership to successfully foster organizational innovations to adapt to their growing multicultural student context. The objective of this study was to gain knowledge of how the university’s cultural intelligence transformational higher education leadership phenomenon worked from a holistic process perspective. Transformational leadership theory was introduced and applied as the theoretical framework for the study, while the cultural intelligence theory and organizational innovations concepts were used to support the theoretical framework. The researcher collected in-depth and rich empirical data from 10 higher education leaders at the public university using unstructured open-ended questions through Zoom one-on-one virtual interviews. The researcher also collected data from artifacts such as the university’s strategic plan documents, annual student success reports, transcribed podcasts, and student success book. The following five themes emerged from the robust thematic analysis and triangulation strategy: (a) employ internal and external motivational drivers, (b) employ the ability to strategically adapt, (c) positive influence on self-confidence and affective commitment, (d) employ cultural intelligence, transformational leadership practices, and (e) foster innovative student support solutions and equitable student success outcomes. The five emergent themes addressed the objective of this study and research questions. The knowledge gained from this study contributed to cultural intelligence, transformational leadership, and organizational innovations scholarship and advanced such knowledge in domestic and global higher education leadership studies and practices.
Dr. Dawn Moore, PhD, 2022
Attaining Leadership Authenticity: Exploring the Lived Experiences of African American Women Faculty at Predominantly White Institutions
As 21st Century scholars emphasize the importance of globalization, cross-cultural climates that foster genuine engagement with race and gender are becoming increasingly significant to the development of global leaders. African American women faculty, however, are often challenged in attaining authentic leadership, particularly with the intersection of their race and gender at educational institutions that are predominantly White. Consequently, exploring their experiences would provide invaluable insight into the roles that race and gender play in attaining authentic leadership. This study explored nine African American women faculty’s narratives about their lived experiences with senior administration at predominantly White institutions. Analysis of data from interview transcripts identified the emerging themes of adversity, self-authorship, and self-efficacy regarding their difficulties and successes in attaining authentic leadership. This research offered a foundational lens with the theoretical frameworks of authentic leadership, Black feminist thought, and intersectionality for understanding leadership authenticity in cross-cultural climates through the perspectives of African American women faculty at predominantly White institutions as a contribution to the field of global leadership.
Dissertation Archive
Dr. Mustapha Atar, 2021
Predictors of Organizational Commitment in an Intense Global Environment: a Quantitative Study of IT Professions in the United States
Dr. Jennifer Wegleitner, 2021
A Mixed Methods Study Examining Faculty Perceptions of Business Students’ Incivility and Its Impact on Preparing Global Leaders
Dr. Christopher Snyder, 2021
Exploring Philanthropic Perceptions of Millennial Global Leaders
Dr. Laura Lumbert, 2021
Exploring Followers\ Lived Experiences with Autonomous Motivation and Leader Support During a Global Organizational Restructuring
Dr. Mandy Wriston, 2021
A Case Study of How Leaders in an Appalachian County View Themselves in a Global Society
Dr. Magnus Jansson, 2021
Innovative work behavior: Leadership receptiveness, individual perseverance, and organizational climate as enablers
Dr. James Kisaale, 2021
Community Leaders’ Transformational Leadership Style in Fostering Community Development: Kenya’s Christian Impact Mission
Dr. Russ Timmons, 2021
Exploring Global Disruptive Leadership in Practice: a Multi-level Pragmatic Synthesis Model
Dr. Chad Copple, 2021
Rural Community College Internationalization: Experiences, Challenges and Successes of Leaders
Dr. Vanetta Busch, 2021
Glocal Human Resources Leaders\ Roles, Role Conflict, and Competencies
Dr. Greg Madsen, 2021
Male Allies’ Perception of Gender Bias and the Relationship Between Psychological Standing and Willingness to Engage
Dr. Tariq Zaman, 2021
A Phenomenological Study of Followership Roles from the Perspective of Followers in the Ready-Made Garment Industry in Bangladesh
Dr. Dr. Martha Martin, 2021
Leaders in Libya: A study of Libyan Mid-Level Oil Executives Examining Leadership Transformation from Expatriate Study of 16 Habits of Mind Curriculum
Dr. Fidelis Agbor, 2021
Experiences of African Born Leaders in the U.S. Army
Dr. Heather Finney, 2021
Relationship between Leadership Styles and Total Quality Management in Chemical Manufacturing Companies in India and the United States
Dr. Eric Christensen, 2020
Servant Leadership in a Global Context: Organizational Relationships in Online Mental Health Service Startups
Dr. Anna Lilleboe, 2020
Courageous Followership in the United States and Japan: Examining the Role of Culture in Ideal Followership
Dr. Collin Barry, 2020
The Relationships between Authentic Leadership, Job Satisfaction, and Organizational Commitment among Generation Z in the United States Marine Corps
Dr. Tobey Zimber, 2020
Global Followers’ Identities Within the Global Social Movement of the Women’s March: A Phenomenological Study
Dr. Nuchelle Chance, 2020
“Nevertheless, She Persisted”: Exploring the Influence of Adversity on Black Women in Higher Education Senior Leadership
Dr. Anna Lilleboe, 2020
Courageous Followership in the United States and Japan: Examining the Role of Culture in Ideal Followership
Dr. Mohamed Yahya Abdel Wedoud , 2020
A Single Case Study Exploring Male Millennial Leaders’ Perceptions of Women as Leaders in a Large Mauritanian Organization
Dr. Abdurrahim Hocagil , 2020
Exploring Global Followership Phenomenon in Global Organizational Context: A Study of Global Followers Within Global Technology Companies
Dr. David Ransom , 2020
An Exploration of Perceptions, Internal Mechanisms and External Forces that may Influence Ethical Decision Making
Dr. Eric Pilon-Bignell , 2020
Exploring Improvisation: The Human Element of Decisions Made by Executives in States of Complexity within Consulting Firms
Dr. Kevin Rooney , 2020
Transformational Leadership and Organizational Commitment in a Multinational Organization: The Partial Mediating Role of Cultural Intelligence
Dr. Michael Fields , 2020
Exploring the Relationship of Predispositions Before and During the College Experience, Including Study Abroad, Which May Impact Intercultural Competence of University Students
Dr. Steven Stauffer , 2019
The Impacts of Business Curriculum Internationalization on Student Completion and Success in Ohio Community Colleges
Dr. Wendy Kobler , 2019
A Phenomenological Study: the Lived Experiences of Women Who Have Achieved CEO Positions in Four-Year Higher Education Institutions
Dr. Danielle Lombard-Sims, 2018
Exploring Antecedents of Organizational Success for Bicultural Global Female Leaders
Dr. James Campbell, Jr., 2018
A Case Study Exploring the Lived Experiences of Direct Support Professionals: Examining the Link between Lived Experiences and Leadership Style
Dr. Danielle Lombard-Sims , 2018
Exploring Antecedence of Organizational Success for Bicultural Female Leaders
Dr. Jehu Chong , 2018
Workplace Longevity and The Lived Experiences of Senior Leaders’ Perceptions of Millennial Job Satisfaction: A Multigenerational Study of the Dutch Caribbean Financial Sector
Dr. Michael Call, 2017
Home or Abroad? Determinants of Major Charitable Giving to Domestic Vs. International Causes
Dr. Angel Baez Vega, 2017
The Lived Experiences of Latina Women It Leaders in Global Organizations: Exploring Their Stories on Intercultural Sensitivity and Trust
Dr. Mia Johnson , 2017
Resilience and Intercultural Competence: Examining the Relationship in Community College Transformational Leaders
Dr. Kristina Creager , 2017
Emotional intelligence & academic success: A study of academically underprepared students in the second semester
Dr. Thomas Lawrence , 2017
Followership in a Global Context: Examining the Relationship between Chinese National Culture and Follower Role Orientation
Dr. Julia Porter , 2017
Factors that Support Student Success and Their Perceptions of Success: Lessons from a Scottish University
Dr. Alicia Wireman , 2017
International Students and U.S. Faculty in Complex Educational Environments: Exploring the Need for Global Leadership in the Classroom. A Case Study
Dr. Charles Dunn , 2016
The Real Deal: Exploring the Lived Experiences of Authentic Global Leaders within International Cooperative Organizations
Dr. Stephen Young , 2016
Follower Perceptions of Frequent Leadership Rotations: A Sequential Explanatory Study
Dr. Joyce Parks, 2015
Preparing Global Citizens for the 21st Century: Examining the Intercultural Competence of Study Abroad Students
Dr. Frank Banfill , 2015
Multiple case studies in effective Africa leadership: A study of the leadership behaviors of effective local church pastors in the Africa inland church Tanzania Mara and Ukerewe diocese
Dr. Joseph Lestrange , 2015
Values Based Leadership 2.0: A Multi Method Study Toward The Development Of A Theoretical Framework For Global Leaders
Dr. Lisa Kindred , 2015
Leadership Fit as a Condition for Meaningful Work: A Study of Iraqi-Born Employees
Dr. Brett Whitaker , 2015
An Analysis of the Academic Disciplinary Development of Global Leadership Education
Dr. Paul Hayes, 2014
Virtual Environmental Factors and Leading Global Virtual Teams