Leadership Development in the Context of Nepal: A Narrative Analysis of the Stories of Non-Christian Jesuit Alumni Leaders

Jesuit education has a long-standing legacy of forming students, especially Catholics, to be effective leaders in all walks of life. But, can Jesuit education be effective when imparted to the students of other faith? This research focused on two questions: a.) How did Jesuit education help the non-...

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Main Author: Thomas, SJ, Fr. Augustine
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Published: Archīum Ateneo 2019
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Online Access:https://archium.ateneo.edu/theses-dissertations/446
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spelling ph-ateneo-arc.theses-dissertations-15722021-09-27T03:00:04Z Leadership Development in the Context of Nepal: A Narrative Analysis of the Stories of Non-Christian Jesuit Alumni Leaders Thomas, SJ, Fr. Augustine Jesuit education has a long-standing legacy of forming students, especially Catholics, to be effective leaders in all walks of life. But, can Jesuit education be effective when imparted to the students of other faith? This research focused on two questions: a.) How did Jesuit education help the non-Christian students grow as leaders in the Hindu/Buddhist religious context of Nepal?, and b.) What are the socio-cultural elements that influenced the leadership development of the students in Nepal? Through the framework of narrative identity, this study analysed the narratives of eight prominent non-Christian Jesuit alumni leaders in Nepal. The result indicated that the leadership identity of these leaders emerged at pre-adult stage from multiple domains, namely from home and school. However, leadership qualities and traits were developed during their life in the Jesuit school. Certain values repeatedly appear in the narratives namely, “doing the right thing”, “empathize”, “be compassionate”, “be truthful”, and “be just”, all reflect that the Jesuit education formed them to be compassionate and ethical in life. These qualities are strongly embedded in the way they lead and how they perceive their role as leaders in their organisations today. The narratives also posit that living in extended families instilled in these leaders the foundational elements for developing positive traits such as hard work, discipline, adaptability to situations and developing interpersonal relationships. 2019-01-01T08:00:00Z text https://archium.ateneo.edu/theses-dissertations/446 Theses and Dissertations (All) Archīum Ateneo Leadership development, Jesuit education, non-Christian context, Ignatian
institution Ateneo De Manila University
building Ateneo De Manila University Library
continent Asia
country Philippines
Philippines
content_provider Ateneo De Manila University Library
collection archium.Ateneo Institutional Repository
topic Leadership development, Jesuit education, non-Christian context, Ignatian
spellingShingle Leadership development, Jesuit education, non-Christian context, Ignatian
Thomas, SJ, Fr. Augustine
Leadership Development in the Context of Nepal: A Narrative Analysis of the Stories of Non-Christian Jesuit Alumni Leaders
description Jesuit education has a long-standing legacy of forming students, especially Catholics, to be effective leaders in all walks of life. But, can Jesuit education be effective when imparted to the students of other faith? This research focused on two questions: a.) How did Jesuit education help the non-Christian students grow as leaders in the Hindu/Buddhist religious context of Nepal?, and b.) What are the socio-cultural elements that influenced the leadership development of the students in Nepal? Through the framework of narrative identity, this study analysed the narratives of eight prominent non-Christian Jesuit alumni leaders in Nepal. The result indicated that the leadership identity of these leaders emerged at pre-adult stage from multiple domains, namely from home and school. However, leadership qualities and traits were developed during their life in the Jesuit school. Certain values repeatedly appear in the narratives namely, “doing the right thing”, “empathize”, “be compassionate”, “be truthful”, and “be just”, all reflect that the Jesuit education formed them to be compassionate and ethical in life. These qualities are strongly embedded in the way they lead and how they perceive their role as leaders in their organisations today. The narratives also posit that living in extended families instilled in these leaders the foundational elements for developing positive traits such as hard work, discipline, adaptability to situations and developing interpersonal relationships.
format text
author Thomas, SJ, Fr. Augustine
author_facet Thomas, SJ, Fr. Augustine
author_sort Thomas, SJ, Fr. Augustine
title Leadership Development in the Context of Nepal: A Narrative Analysis of the Stories of Non-Christian Jesuit Alumni Leaders
title_short Leadership Development in the Context of Nepal: A Narrative Analysis of the Stories of Non-Christian Jesuit Alumni Leaders
title_full Leadership Development in the Context of Nepal: A Narrative Analysis of the Stories of Non-Christian Jesuit Alumni Leaders
title_fullStr Leadership Development in the Context of Nepal: A Narrative Analysis of the Stories of Non-Christian Jesuit Alumni Leaders
title_full_unstemmed Leadership Development in the Context of Nepal: A Narrative Analysis of the Stories of Non-Christian Jesuit Alumni Leaders
title_sort leadership development in the context of nepal: a narrative analysis of the stories of non-christian jesuit alumni leaders
publisher Archīum Ateneo
publishDate 2019
url https://archium.ateneo.edu/theses-dissertations/446
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