EMBA Refresher with Prof Kosheek Sewchurran
EMBA Alumni refresher invites you to a candid conversation about how Leadership doesn’t fail because we don’t know better. It fails because learning doesn’t endure.
Event information
Over the past decade, leadership has become more demanding – not because executives lack insight, values, or ethical awareness, but because holding onto what matters has become increasingly difficult. Many leaders can articulate purpose, responsibility, and intent with clarity. Yet under pressure, urgency, and constant interruption, those commitments quietly dissolve.
This EMBA Alumni refresher invites a candid conversation about how leadership teaching has had to change in response to this uncomfortable truth.
Drawing on long-running EMBA practice and recent research on learning to endure, the session explores a decisive shift in leadership education: away from heroic action and episodic insight, and toward leadership as a disciplined practice of endurance. Leadership, in this view, is not defined only by moments of clarity or inspiration, but by what survives re-entry into everyday organisational life – when no one is watching and when competing demands take over.
Speakers
Kosheek Sewchurran
Professor Kosheek Sewchurran is primarily interested in organising practices and research that acknowledge the realities of a lived-experience. This scholarship finds expression in the conversation he convenes related to Business Model Innovation, Strategy-as-practice and Leadership-as-practice.
Before he joined the UCT GSB, he was Assoc Prof and HOD of the Department of Information Systems at UCT's Faculty of Commerce. Prior to entering academia, he spent a little over a decade on manufacturing projects, working as a Systems Engineer optimising plant automation and designing and implementing enterprise information systems.
Sewchurran holds a doctorate in Project Organising (PhD) from UCT; a Master of Science in Systems Thinking (MSc) from UKZN; a Bachelor of Science Honours in Computer Science (CompSci) from UKZN; and a Bachelor of Science in Software Engineering and Operations Research (BSc) from UNISA.