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The Hauenstein Institute’s approach to leadership competencies is fundamentally reshaped by the transformative encounters at the heart of the UnLearning Programme. Rather than treating competencies as static skill sets or behavioural checklists, HI understands them as relational, developmental, and emergent capacities—formed through meaningful engagement with people, perspectives, and realities that disrupt familiar patterns of thought.

In the UnLearning Programme, leaders are invited into dialogue with marginalised, indigenous, and underrepresented communities whose experiences challenge dominant assumptions about leadership, power, and progress. These encounters become the crucible in which new competencies are forged. Leaders learn not from abstraction, but from lived stories that reveal systemic inequities, cultural wisdom, and alternative ways of understanding the world.

From this process, several core competencies emerge.

1. Deep Listening and Relational Presence

Leaders develop the ability to listen without defensiveness, to hold silence, and to receive perspectives that unsettle their worldview. This presence becomes foundational for trust, collaboration, and ethical decision‑making.

2. Reflexivity and SelfInterrogation

UnLearning cultivates the capacity to examine one’s own assumptions, biases, and inherited narratives. Leaders learn to recognise how their positionality shapes their interpretations and actions.

3. Cultural Humility and Intercultural Competence

Through direct engagement with diverse communities, leaders build the humility and sensitivity required to navigate cultural difference with respect, curiosity, and care.

4. Ethical Imagination and Moral Courage

Hearing stories of harm, resilience, and aspiration strengthens leaders’ ability to envision more just futures and to act courageously in service of them.

5. Systemic Awareness and Responsibility

Leaders begin to see how institutional decisions ripple across communities and ecosystems. They develop the capacity to act with long‑term responsibility rather than short‑term expediency.

6. Cocreation and Shared Leadership

UnLearning teaches leaders to move beyond consultation toward genuine partnership—designing solutions with, not for, the communities they serve.

These competencies are not taught through lectures; they are grown through relationship, humility, and mutual transformation. The UnLearning Programme thus becomes the foundation for a new kind of leadership—one capable of stewarding institutions that honour dignity, repair harm, and contribute to flourishing futures.