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Volume 32, Issue 4: August, 2005
Abstract
The Effects of Leadership and Governance Processes on
Member Participation in Community Health Coalitions
Maureen E. Metzger, PhD, Jeffrey A. Alexander, PhD, and Bryan
J. Weiner, PhD
This study examines the effects of coalition leadership and
governance on member participation in voluntary community
health coalitions. Path modeling was used to explore how leadership
and governance processes in coalitions affect existing member
costs, benefits, and levels of participation. It was hypothesized
that the effects of coalition decision making and leadership
variables would be indirect by working through their effects
on participants’ perceived influence over coalition
decision making and on overall consensus around the coalition
vision. Results of the analysis indicate that open and collaborative
decision making and empowering leadership do have indirect,
positive effects on the level of participation byway of vision
consensus and participation benefits. Participation costs,
however, show no significant direct effect on the level of
participation. Perceived personal influence appears to be
primarily an outcome of participation rather than an antecedent.
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