In this project, you will demonstrate your mastery of the following competency:
Identify yourself as a leader and follower to be effective as an individual and team contributor
Overview
Many well-known leaders wrote and continue to write in journals, reflecting on their actions and decisions in their leadership roles. These reflections allow leaders to revisit their choices and learn how to improve their actions and decisions to become more effective leaders in the future.
Directions
Write a reflective paper describing your leadership style and skills. Reflect on what you have learned throughout the course, and think about how you can use this knowledge to further your career. Use the results of your self-assessments, leadership map, and other course materials to guide your reflection. Begin your reflection with a single statement that concisely summarizes your leadership style and approach. The statement should be one that you could later share on LinkedIn or your resume. You could also use it to guide your professional development.
Specifically, you must address the following rubric criteria:
Leadership Approach:
Leadership Skills: Describe your primary leadership skills and describe how these skills will help you effectively lead a team. Additionally, describe skills or attributes you would like to develop and improve upon in order to become a better leader.
Leading and Following: Explain the importance of being able to both lead and follow when working as part of a team, along with how well you are able to lead and follow on a team while in a leadership role.
Leadership Style: Describe your personal leadership style and explain how you intend to use that style when working with a diverse, dynamic team.
Hydraulic fracturing or ‘fracking’ has been the topic of much debate over recent years in the UK due to the desire to exploit the UK’s significant onshore resources of shale gas . In this essay ‘government’ refers to the Conservative-led governing body of England. Current government policy is aiming to start shale gas fracking as soon as possible. There has been a lot of public opposition to the Government’s stance. Yet, the Government still stands by the belief that fracking will benefit the security of supply and promote the transition ‘to a low carbon economy’ . In this context, ‘adequately regulated’ is the situation where the UK’s regulations ensure that the safety and health of the environment and population will not be degraded in favour of the economy. This essay argues that fracking regulations in the United Kingdom seem procedurally adequate but are not substantively adequate for three key reasons. Firstly, the Government has framed their approach to fracking in a way that is virtually inaccessible to the British public. Furthermore, there is a serious lack of knowledge of the consequences of fracking upon the environment, and the information we do have leaves a lot of ambiguity. Lastly, it is important to analyse England’s substantive and procedural approach and compare it to that of Scotland.
The Government’s manipulation of regulatory ‘dexterity’ and regularity ‘domain’ to create the illusion of adequate fracking regulation
The Government has fought to emphasise the rigorous nature of the UK regulatory controls. However, it has also argued against the need for specialist regulation in this area. This reflects the Government’s strategies of regulatory ‘domain’ (looking at legislation in the abstract) and regulatory ‘dexterity’ (looking at legislation in detail). Framing involves ‘the social construction of reality’. It is an issue ‘which invites interpretation’ and ‘is likely to differ substantially depending on the interests of those involved’ . This underpins a key issue with fracking in the UK; regulatory ‘domain’ and regulatory ‘dexterity’ are ways in which the Government can ‘frame’ fracking issues in a way that promotes their aims, often at the expense of due process, the health of the environment and the health of the British public, as will be exemplified throughout this essay.
When applying arguments of regulatory ‘dexterity’, the Government places emphasis on the market-transforming potential of a new supply of shale gas . These arguments are used to promote fracking as a positive innovation that has different end products and new benefits compared with traditional gas production . The focus of the Government is to eliminate regulation that inhibits its development of fracking. It can therefore be argued that in doing so, the Government is not ensuring that fracking is adequately regulated as the focus is placed on speeding up the fracking process, rather than guaranteeing the protection of the environment and population’s health from the risks of