Psychedelics, Leadership, and Systems Change

  • 02/09/2023
  • 17:00 - 17:30
  • Room: Rudolf-Virchow (2nd floor)

Abstract


Humanity faces multiple overlapping crises in our major systems. The so-called metacrisis (or polycrisis) is rooted in the extractive pattern of our economic system and, at a deeper level, the foundational myth of disconnection. The antidote to the extractive pattern is a regenerative economic system, in which resources circulate to restore and strengthen the economic, social, and natural systems supporting individual and collective well-being. Transitioning to such a system will require leadership, but traditional conceptions of leadership are at odds with the distributed pattern of decision-making intrinsic to a regenerative system, as well as the self-organizing process of emergent change from which such a system might arise.Professor Rachelle Sampson and I, along with our collaborators, are conducting a research project – the Connected Leadership Study – that speaks to this leadership challenge. Can personally transformative experiences rooted in reconnection lead to the professional transformation of organizational leaders? Do psychedelic experiences lead to decision-making that takes into account a broader set of stakeholders over a longer time horizon? Can such experiences give rise to another form of leadership – Connected Leadership – that catalyzes the collective intelligence of the group to enable deeply collaborative responses to organizational and systemic challenges?

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