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Hardcover Book Details
  • 09/2024
  • 9781637560563
  • 338 pages
  • $28.50
To Stop a Tyrant: The Power of Political Followers to Make or Brake a Toxic Leader
Ira Chaleff, author
It is a sad fact that the world is awash in political tyrants. ​So is human history. Ira Chaleff, an expert in political followership and one of the 100 “Best Minds in Leadership” (Leadership Excellence magazine) reveals how political followers can make or “brake” toxic leaders and what we can do—no matter our level of political influence or where we sit on the political spectrum—to support beneficial leaders and stop the rise of would-be tyrants. Political tyrants are one of the most destructive forces in the world, perpetrating mass oppression, suffering, war, and genocide. Unfortunately, we are no closer to eliminating this scourge of human political organization than we have ever been. Wherever you are on the political spectrum, you may have growing—even alarming—concerns about the potential impact of destructive political leaders on your country and those you love. You see increasing attempts by these leaders to use the power of the media and government to control the citizenry, enrich their cronies, turn ordinary people against each other, and weaken the checks and balances on which democracies depend. At the same time, you may feel despair about your ability to make a difference on the course of events, or feel unsure of how to take a stand. Ira Chaleff, with his long and deep exposure to leadership and followership at high levels of government service, and his extensive research into abuses of power, shows us that we, too, have power—and maybe more than we think. But it must be used in timely and politically savvy ways. Chaleff unpacks the choices for action available to us depending on our circle of influence in relation to political leaders whom we support or oppose. He explores the pressures found in each of these circles and identifies windows of opportunity for interrupting a progression from governance to tyrannical rule. Chaleff reveals the follower’s ability to make a tangible difference in preventing the rise and consolidation of power of toxic political leaders. He offers his readers a sense of real personal agency in place of feelings of helplessness and anxiety. Building on the success of his award-winning books, The Courageous Follower and Intelligent Disobedience, Chaleff’s timely new book provides a mirror, a map, and guideposts for looking at ourselves and our ability to create better political leadership that we crave for our communities and our nation.
Reviews
Chaleff explains how anyone can interrupt the rise of what he calls a “prototyrant”—someone threatening to assume absolute power, oppressively. Rather than focus on what can be done by those with power, Chaleff explores the steps available to distinct kinds of potential followers to “better discern and interrupt unwanted outcomes,” with an emphasis on leadership within activist circles, influencer and bureaucratic realms, and the general populace as well as the unique challenges and opportunities each group faces in attempting to interrupt a prototyrant’s efforts to secure greater power. Chaleff persuasively argues that it takes a coalition of all five of these follower types to interrupt tyranny.

Chaleff (author of The Courageous Follower) grounds his theories on followership in his experience consulting for governments and heads of state, and his arguments and data are laid out with clarity and power, although the language about possible action at times could be more concrete. The reader of To Stop a Tyrant who falls into the “populace” category may find this book less immediately helpful than those in the “bureaucrat,” “elite,” or “confidant” circles, since Chaleff has much more direct advice for them. The message throughout, though, is direct: all these circles must work together, in coalition, from early in a prototyrant’s rise, to interrupt oppression “before the autocrat has time to consolidate power and eliminate all challenges to his rule.”

Chaleff’s nonpartisan approach allows for examples of resisting tyranny from a variety of political contexts as he explores strong case studies, like the rise of Václav Havel, and considers persistent problems in bureaucratic democracies, like “diffuse accountability,” or how governments tend to tilt toward autocracy when countering external threats. His focus on followership rather than leadership gives To Stop a Tyrant a more practical bent than other examinations of dictatorial leadership. Readers concerned about democracy will appreciate this practical examination of the unique roles we all can play in defending against tyrants.

Takeaway: Urgent look at how “followers” throughout the population can interrupt a tyrant’s rise.

Comparable Titles: Timothy Snyder’s On Tyranny, J.R. Moody’s A March Toward Tyranny.

Production grades
Cover: A-
Design and typography: A-
Illustrations: A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A-

Formats
Hardcover Book Details
  • 09/2024
  • 9781637560563
  • 338 pages
  • $28.50
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