TITLE:
The Generative Architecture of Leadership: A Critical Realist Exploration of Mechanism-Outcome Configurations
AUTHORS:
Jörg Krauter
KEYWORDS:
Systemic Leadership Model, Critical Realism, Generative Mechanisms, Complexity Leadership, Relational Leadership, Retroduction
JOURNAL NAME:
Open Journal of Leadership,
Vol.15 No.1,
January
29,
2026
ABSTRACT: Purpose: The purpose of this study is to explore whether empirically observable patterns are consistent with the mechanism configuration proposed by the Systemic Leadership Model, using pattern-oriented analyses within a critical-realist framework. This framework conceptualizes leadership as an emergent phenomenon arising from the interaction of five generative mechanism families: structural-power, cultural-normative, relational-affective, human agency/psychological, and adaptive learning mechanisms. Building on sixteen empirically grounded indicator nodes, the study explores whether these mechanism families form a coherent systemic architecture and whether they exhibit differentiated, theoretically meaningful patterns of activation in relation to five leadership outcome domains—psychological health, task performance, organizational citizenship behavior, job crafting, and innovative behavior. In doing so, the study assesses whether leadership outcomes can be plausibly understood as emergent system states produced by context-specific constellations of generative mechanisms rather than by additive effects of isolated variables. Design: Survey data from N = 71 practicing leaders were analyzed using correlations, principal component analysis, and hierarchical clustering to examine systemic mechanism patterns. Associations between the mechanisms and psychological health, task performance, Organizational Citizenship Behavior (OCB), job crafting, and innovative behavior were examined using bivariate correlations. In line with critical-realist methodology, patterns of empirical convergence and divergence were interpreted retroductively as surface expressions of potential underlying generative tendencies in open organizational systems. Findings: The findings reveal a systemic architecture in which the five mechanism families of the SLM activate selectively rather than uniformly. Relational-affective and cultural-normative mechanisms form the empirical core of the system, showing notable and most consistent activation across analyses. Structural-power mechanisms, affected by informal political dynamics, exert selective but substantial influence, while psychological agency mechanisms appear as a coherent but mostly latent subsystem. Adaptive learning mechanisms show minimal activation, indicating strong context dependence. Across outcomes, distinct mechanism constellations emerge: Psychological Health is influenced by relational, cultural, and psychological mechanisms; OCB arises from relational-affective and cultural-normative processes; Innovative Behavior is driven primarily by relational-affective mechanisms and selectively by political dynamics; Task Performance depends almost entirely on structural-power mechanisms; and Job Crafting is unrelated to any systemic mechanism family, pointing to intrapersonal generative powers. These differentiated patterns provide empirical support for the SLM’s core proposition that leadership outcomes represent emergent states produced by context-specific combinations of generative mechanisms, rather than by universal or additive indicators. Originality/Value: This study advances leadership theory by offering a theory-guided exploration of a critical-realist, mechanism-based framework of leadership. Rather than proposing a definitive model or testing fixed hypotheses, it examines whether empirically observable patterns are consistent with the Systemic Leadership Model (SLM) as a plausible architecture of generative mechanisms spanning relational-affective, cultural-normative, structural-power, psychological, and adaptive-learning domains. The findings provide exploratory and indicative support for this architecture, suggesting that leadership patterns tend to organize around underlying causal tendencies rather than isolated behavioral or structural variables. In this respect, the SLM extends existing perspectives such as Relational Leadership Theory and Complexity Leadership Theory by clarifying the ontological status of relational and emergent phenomena and by integrating behavioral, cognitive, and cultural insights into a unified systemic framework. As an exploratory contribution, the model does not claim explanatory closure but offers a theoretically grounded heuristic for diagnosing how interdependent mechanisms may shape health, cooperation, innovation, and performance in open organizational systems, thereby providing a foundation for future confirmatory, longitudinal, and mixed-method research.