Fromcollegial +-ity.
collegiality (countable anduncountable,pluralcollegialities)
- collegialatmosphere; working with colleagues in an effective and cooperative manner
2003, Nigel Bennett, Megan Crawford, Marion Cartwright,Effective Educational Leadership, SAGE,→ISBN,page248:To what extent doescollegiality still exist in the management here?
2010, Laura Empson,Managing the Modern Law Firm: New Challenges, New Perspectives, OUP Oxford,→ISBN,page213:Within a global law firm there is plainly a need for a common culture andcollegiality: every lawyer a client deals with anywhere in the world is a representative of the firm and needs to exhibit common values. The teamwork which is critical to a global firm strategy is based on a collegial approach.
2012, Donald R. Songer, Susan Johnson, C.L. Ostberg, Matthew Wetstein,Law, Ideology, and Collegiality: Judicial Behaviour in the Supreme Court of Canada, McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP,→ISBN,page153:Second, most of the justices suggested that informal norms ofcollegiality and respect for the opinions of colleagues often resulted in deliberate efforts to find acceptable compromise.
- power andauthority that isshared amongpeers, especially the sharing ofcollegiate power amongRoman Catholicbishops.
2002, Maureen Sullivan,101 Questions and Answers on Vatican II, Paulist Press,→ISBN,page45:Butcollegiality does refer to a kind of sharing of authority between Rome and all the other local churches. Each bishop represents his own local church, and the pope represents the local church of Rome which, by tradition, exercises a primacy of love over all the other local churches and has become the church-of-last-resort in disputed questions.
2008, Gerard Mannion,The Vision of John Paul II: Assessing His Thought and Influence, Liturgical Press,→ISBN,page184:For all the criticisms of John Paul's practice ofcollegiality, there is no doubt that he spoke often and highly of its importance. From his very firstUrbi et Orbi address, given the day after his election, where he spoke of the “special bond, that is,collegiality” which “binds together the sacred pastors” [..] thecollegiality of the bishops was a thread running through his pontificate.
power and authority that is shared among peers
working with colleagues in an effective and cooperative manner