The moderating effect of Leadership style on Human Resource Practices and Organizational Culture in the Universities of Juba, Juba, South Sudan

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Abstract

The research study examines how various leadership styles affect the organizational culture, human resource management, and foster resilience and innovative capabilities of universities located in Juba, South Sudan. The research establishes that higher education institutions in the region require leadership methods which should be adapted to their specific socio-political and resource problems while using transformational leadership theory as their base. The researchers applied quantitative methodology to examine university staff, student, and security personnel data through the use of correlation, regression, ANOVA, Bayesian, and Chi-square tests. The study discovered that leadership effectiveness produces a strong positive effect on organizational culture which results from perception, experience, and innovation as the main factors which establish organizational resilience. The study found that leadership style functions as a moderating factor which affects how HR practices impact institutional culture while determining the capacity of organizations to adapt and maintain their operations. The study results demonstrate that strategic leadership development and stakeholder engagement constitute essential elements which enable universities to develop resilient innovative systems that operate successfully when facing social, economic, and political challenges. The advisory report calls for South Sudanese higher education institutions to build their leadership skills through capacity development and to create policies which foster ongoing innovation and resilience while establishing inclusive and adaptive organizational practices.

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