Influence of leaders’ emotional intelligence on resilience to violent extremism among Boys’ secondary schools in the north eastern Counties of Kenya
Date
2025-07Author
Adan, Happi Happi
Tarsilla, Kibaara
Esther, Thuba
Type
ArticleLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Purpose: The study sought to examine the influence of leaders’ emotional intelligence on
resilience to violent extremism among boys’ secondary schools in the North Eastern counties
in Kenya.
Methodology: The study employed a cross-sectional design that integrated both quantitative
and qualitative methods. It targeted 5,870 male students, 18 Directors of Education, 18 Deputy
County Commissioners, and 108 school administrators across the North Eastern counties of
Kenya. Using stratified and simple random sampling, a sample of 375 respondents was
selected. Data were collected through structured questionnaires and interviews, with
quantitative data analyzed using SPSS Version 26 and qualitative data subjected to thematic
analysis for triangulation.
Results: The findings showed a significant positive relationship between leaders’ emotional
intelligence and student resilience to violent extremism (r = 0.548, p < 0.01). Leaders who
demonstrated emotional regulation, empathy, and constructive conflict resolution created safer
and more supportive school environments. Students in such settings reported greater emotional
safety, trust, and openness.
Conclusion: Emotional intelligence is a key leadership trait that strengthens institutional
resilience to violent extremism. Leaders with high EI foster trust, open dialogue, and emotional
safety, reducing student vulnerability to radicalization.
Recommendations: The study recommends targeted training programs for school leaders to
develop emotional intelligence competencies such as self-awareness, empathy, and emotion
regulation.
Publisher
African Journal of Emerging Issues (AJOEI)
Subject
Leaders’ Emotional IntelligenceResilience to Violent Extremism
Boys’ Secondary Schools
North Eastern Counties
