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Efficiency meets accountability: Performance implications of supply chain configuration, control, and capabilities
Authors:Anne Parmigiani  Robert D Klassen  Michael V Russo
Institution:a Lundquist College of Business, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR 97403, United States
b Richard Ivey School of Business, The University of Western Ontario, London, Ontario N6A 3K7, Canada
Abstract:The public increasingly holds firms accountable for social and environmental outcomes, such as product toxicity problems and human rights violations, throughout their global supply chains. How can companies improve the social and environmental performance within their supply chains, particularly as other competitive pressures, such as cost and quality, continue to escalate? Starting from an efficient versus responsive supply chain framework, we develop an integrative model that blends together elements of supply chain configuration, stakeholder management, and capability development. Specifically, we spotlight the dimensions of control and accountability that collectively determine stakeholder exposure, and show how this new construct affects the linkages between supply chain capabilities, configuration, and performance. In particular, this analysis reveals that the nature of stakeholder exposure determines how social/environmental technical and relational capabilities impact social and environmental outcomes. We conclude with implications for research and practice, discussing how current supply chain theories must be extended to incorporate external stakeholders, to clarify strategies and identify potential pitfalls, and to better predict performance outcomes.
Keywords:Supply management  Social responsibility  Environmental issues  International/global issues
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