The Matriarch Effect
Ancient Wisdom, Modern Organizations, and the New Logic of Power
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3 Months Free
Buy Now for $25.08
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Narrated by:
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Nicole Parsons
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By:
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Robyn Short
Eighty percent of the global workforce is disengaged. Half of American workers carry significant stress in their bodies. Despite billions invested in AI, wellness, and engagement initiatives, the numbers keep getting worse. The patriarchal organizational model — born of the Industrial Revolution, built on the extraction of human energy — is failing. In The Matriarch Effect, conflict transformation expert and Workplace Peace Institute founder Robyn Short offers a bold and deeply researched answer. Drawing on her work on dignity in organizational systems design, decades of consulting with leaders across industries, ancient matriarchal wisdom, and lessons from the animal kingdom, Short reveals a different way of organizing human life together.
Matriarchy is not patriarchy in reverse. It is an organizing principle rooted in care, attunement, and the fierce protection of the collective. And it has already sustained the most resilient communities in human history. Part One names the patriarch effect — what it is, how it was built, and what the neuroscience and Gallup data reveal about its true cost. Part Two introduces the Five Intelligences of matriarchal leadership and the practices that flow from them: distributed leadership, the collaboration advantage, psychological safety, conflict as a feature (not a bug), elder wisdom, and a redefinition of success that measures human flourishing alongside financial performance. Part Three delivers an eight-step roadmap for designing power differently — measured year over year, grounded in love, and built to last beyond any single leader's tenure.
Through powerful case studies of organizations already living this work, Short shows what becomes possible when leaders choose to walk beside the people they lead rather than above them.
We are not inventing something new. We are remembering something old.
©2026 Robyn Short (P)2026 Robyn Short