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Supply chain resilience in a developing country context: A case study on the interconnectedness of threats, strategies, and outcomes

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Supply chain resilience in a developing country context: A case study on the interconnectedness of threats, strategies, and outcomes. / Tukamuhabwa Rwakira, Benjamin; Stevenson, Mark; Busby, Jeremy Simon.
In: Supply Chain Management: An International Journal, Vol. 22, No. 6, 04.12.2017, p. 486-505.

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Tukamuhabwa Rwakira B, Stevenson M, Busby JS. Supply chain resilience in a developing country context: A case study on the interconnectedness of threats, strategies, and outcomes. Supply Chain Management: An International Journal. 2017 Dec 4;22(6):486-505. Epub 2017 Sept 11. doi: 10.1108/SCM-02-2017-0059

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@article{5ba83dfc0e5e45f38e5aa194bf94f2ac,
title = "Supply chain resilience in a developing country context: A case study on the interconnectedness of threats, strategies, and outcomes",
abstract = "PurposeIn few prior empirical studies on supply chain resilience (SCRES), the focus has been on the developed world. Yet, organisations in developing countries constitute a significant part of global supply chains and have also experienced the disastrous effects of supply chain failures. The purpose of this paper is therefore to empirically investigate SCRES in a developing country context and to show that this also provides theoretical insights into the nature of what is meant by resilience.Design/methodology/approachUsing a case study approach, a supply network of 20 manufacturing firms in Uganda is analysed based on a total of 45 interviews.FindingsThe perceived threats to SCRES in this context are mainly small-scale, chronic disruptive events rather than discrete, large-scale catastrophic events typically emphasised in the literature. The data reveal how threats of disruption, resilience strategies and outcomes are inter-related in complex, coupled and non-linear ways. These interrelationships are explained by the political, cultural and territorial embeddedness of the supply network in a developing country. Further, this embeddedness contributes to the phenomenon of supply chain risk migration, whereby an attempt to mitigate one threat produces another threat and/or shifts the threat to another point in the supply network.Practical implicationsManagers should be aware, for example, of potential risk migration from one threat to another when crafting strategies to build SCRES. Equally, the potential for risk migration across the supply network means managers should look at the supply chain holistically because actors along the chain are so interconnected.Originality/valueThe paper goes beyond the extant literature by highlighting how SCRES is not only about responding to specific, isolated threats but about the continuous management of risk migration. It demonstrates that resilience requires both an understanding of the interconnectedness of threats, strategies and outcomes and an understanding of the embeddedness of the supply network. Finally, this study{\textquoteright}s focus on the context of a developing country reveals that resilience should be equally concerned both with smaller in scale, chronic disruptions and with occasional, large-scale catastrophic events.",
author = "{Tukamuhabwa Rwakira}, Benjamin and Mark Stevenson and Busby, {Jeremy Simon}",
note = "This article is (c) 2017 Emerald Group Publishing and permission has been granted for this version to appear here. Emerald does not grant permission for this article to be further copied/distributed or hosted elsewhere without the express permission from Emerald Group Publishing Limited.",
year = "2017",
month = dec,
day = "4",
doi = "10.1108/SCM-02-2017-0059",
language = "English",
volume = "22",
pages = "486--505",
journal = "Supply Chain Management: An International Journal",
issn = "1359-8546",
publisher = "Emerald Group Publishing Ltd.",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Supply chain resilience in a developing country context

T2 - A case study on the interconnectedness of threats, strategies, and outcomes

AU - Tukamuhabwa Rwakira, Benjamin

AU - Stevenson, Mark

AU - Busby, Jeremy Simon

N1 - This article is (c) 2017 Emerald Group Publishing and permission has been granted for this version to appear here. Emerald does not grant permission for this article to be further copied/distributed or hosted elsewhere without the express permission from Emerald Group Publishing Limited.

PY - 2017/12/4

Y1 - 2017/12/4

N2 - PurposeIn few prior empirical studies on supply chain resilience (SCRES), the focus has been on the developed world. Yet, organisations in developing countries constitute a significant part of global supply chains and have also experienced the disastrous effects of supply chain failures. The purpose of this paper is therefore to empirically investigate SCRES in a developing country context and to show that this also provides theoretical insights into the nature of what is meant by resilience.Design/methodology/approachUsing a case study approach, a supply network of 20 manufacturing firms in Uganda is analysed based on a total of 45 interviews.FindingsThe perceived threats to SCRES in this context are mainly small-scale, chronic disruptive events rather than discrete, large-scale catastrophic events typically emphasised in the literature. The data reveal how threats of disruption, resilience strategies and outcomes are inter-related in complex, coupled and non-linear ways. These interrelationships are explained by the political, cultural and territorial embeddedness of the supply network in a developing country. Further, this embeddedness contributes to the phenomenon of supply chain risk migration, whereby an attempt to mitigate one threat produces another threat and/or shifts the threat to another point in the supply network.Practical implicationsManagers should be aware, for example, of potential risk migration from one threat to another when crafting strategies to build SCRES. Equally, the potential for risk migration across the supply network means managers should look at the supply chain holistically because actors along the chain are so interconnected.Originality/valueThe paper goes beyond the extant literature by highlighting how SCRES is not only about responding to specific, isolated threats but about the continuous management of risk migration. It demonstrates that resilience requires both an understanding of the interconnectedness of threats, strategies and outcomes and an understanding of the embeddedness of the supply network. Finally, this study’s focus on the context of a developing country reveals that resilience should be equally concerned both with smaller in scale, chronic disruptions and with occasional, large-scale catastrophic events.

AB - PurposeIn few prior empirical studies on supply chain resilience (SCRES), the focus has been on the developed world. Yet, organisations in developing countries constitute a significant part of global supply chains and have also experienced the disastrous effects of supply chain failures. The purpose of this paper is therefore to empirically investigate SCRES in a developing country context and to show that this also provides theoretical insights into the nature of what is meant by resilience.Design/methodology/approachUsing a case study approach, a supply network of 20 manufacturing firms in Uganda is analysed based on a total of 45 interviews.FindingsThe perceived threats to SCRES in this context are mainly small-scale, chronic disruptive events rather than discrete, large-scale catastrophic events typically emphasised in the literature. The data reveal how threats of disruption, resilience strategies and outcomes are inter-related in complex, coupled and non-linear ways. These interrelationships are explained by the political, cultural and territorial embeddedness of the supply network in a developing country. Further, this embeddedness contributes to the phenomenon of supply chain risk migration, whereby an attempt to mitigate one threat produces another threat and/or shifts the threat to another point in the supply network.Practical implicationsManagers should be aware, for example, of potential risk migration from one threat to another when crafting strategies to build SCRES. Equally, the potential for risk migration across the supply network means managers should look at the supply chain holistically because actors along the chain are so interconnected.Originality/valueThe paper goes beyond the extant literature by highlighting how SCRES is not only about responding to specific, isolated threats but about the continuous management of risk migration. It demonstrates that resilience requires both an understanding of the interconnectedness of threats, strategies and outcomes and an understanding of the embeddedness of the supply network. Finally, this study’s focus on the context of a developing country reveals that resilience should be equally concerned both with smaller in scale, chronic disruptions and with occasional, large-scale catastrophic events.

U2 - 10.1108/SCM-02-2017-0059

DO - 10.1108/SCM-02-2017-0059

M3 - Journal article

VL - 22

SP - 486

EP - 505

JO - Supply Chain Management: An International Journal

JF - Supply Chain Management: An International Journal

SN - 1359-8546

IS - 6

ER -