Leadership : lessons from a life in diplomacy / Simon McDonald.
London : Haus Publishing Ltd., 2022Description: xiv, 258 pages : 1 map.Content type: text | cartographic image Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781913368685; 9781913368692.Note: Gift: Lord McDonald of Salford. (Copy B)Subject(s): McDonald, Simon Gerard, Baron McDonald of Salford, 1961 | Great Britain. Foreign and Commonwealth Office -- Officials and employees | Political leadership | Great Britain -- Foreign relations -- 1979-1997 | Great Britain -- Foreign relations -- 1997-DDC classification: 941.085 Summary: "When Abraham Lincoln said, ‘You can be anything you want to be,’ Americans, and eventually everybody everywhere, lifted their sights. Nowadays anybody can aspire to be a leader, and nearly everybody has to lead sometimes. In his first book, Simon McDonald assumes that thinking about leadership before you lead helps you lead better. No matter the circumstances in which we might be called to lead – be it at work, on the sports field, or in the community – the example of top leaders in politics and public service (both their successes and shortcomings) can help you figure out your own approach. Over four decades in HM Diplomatic Service, Simon worked for four permanent under-secretaries and a dozen senior ambassadors before becoming permanent under-secretary himself and leading the Service (which has over 14,000 staff in 270 countries worldwide) for five years. He also worked directly for six foreign secretaries and saw five ministers work at close quarters. Observing these people undertaking the most important and often the most difficult work in the country, Simon saw the behaviours that helped them achieve their objectives, and those that hindered them. He then had the chance to try to apply that learning. In a closing chapter that considers the future of leadership in the UK, Simon McDonald makes a compelling case for the reform of the monarchy, the cabinet, civil service, and, in particular, the House of Lords, of which he has been a member since 2021. Leadership of the United Kingdom is being debated as never before. This book is a clear-sighted and insightful contribution to that debate."-- Taken from dust jacket.Item type | Current library | Class number | Copy number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | |
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Book | Millbank Dewey | 941.085 MCD (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | B | Issued | Gift: Lord MacDonald of Salford. | 01/04/2024 | 020962 | |
Book | House of Lords Library - Palace Dewey | 941.085 MCD (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Copy A | Available | 020117 |
Browsing House of Lords Library - Palace shelves, Shelving location: Dewey Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
941.085 MAR Culture in Britain since 1945 / | 941.085 MAR A history of modern Britain / | 941.085 MAR Elizabethans : how modern Britain was forged / | 941.085 MCD Leadership : lessons from a life in diplomacy / | 941.085 MCD Leadership : lessons from a life in diplomacy / | 941.085 MOR Britain since 1945 : the people's peace / | 941.085 NEW The reinvention of Britain 1960-2016 : |
"When Abraham Lincoln said, ‘You can be anything you want to be,’ Americans, and eventually everybody everywhere, lifted their sights. Nowadays anybody can aspire to be a leader, and nearly everybody has to lead sometimes. In his first book, Simon McDonald assumes that thinking about leadership before you lead helps you lead better. No matter the circumstances in which we might be called to lead – be it at work, on the sports field, or in the community – the example of top leaders in politics and public service (both their successes and shortcomings) can help you figure out your own approach. Over four decades in HM Diplomatic Service, Simon worked for four permanent under-secretaries and a dozen senior ambassadors before becoming permanent under-secretary himself and leading the Service (which has over 14,000 staff in 270 countries worldwide) for five years. He also worked directly for six foreign secretaries and saw five ministers work at close quarters. Observing these people undertaking the most important and often the most difficult work in the country, Simon saw the behaviours that helped them achieve their objectives, and those that hindered them. He then had the chance to try to apply that learning. In a closing chapter that considers the future of leadership in the UK, Simon McDonald makes a compelling case for the reform of the monarchy, the cabinet, civil service, and, in particular, the House of Lords, of which he has been a member since 2021. Leadership of the United Kingdom is being debated as never before. This book is a clear-sighted and insightful contribution to that debate."-- Taken from dust jacket.
Gift: Lord McDonald of Salford. (Copy B)