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“I am because we are”: The role of Sub-Saharan Africa’s collectivist culture in achieving traceability and global supply chain resilience

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“I am because we are”: The role of Sub-Saharan Africa’s collectivist culture in achieving traceability and global supply chain resilience. / Razak, Ghadafi; Stevenson, Mark; Hendry, Linda.
In: Journal of Supply Chain Management, Vol. 60, No. 4, 31.10.2024, p. 46-74.

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@article{ee98c26d4b3e47ca8025684c1fbbbc38,
title = "“I am because we are”: The role of Sub-Saharan Africa{\textquoteright}s collectivist culture in achieving traceability and global supply chain resilience",
abstract = "Prior studies on traceability as an enabler of supply chain resilience (SCRes) have focused on large-scale disruptions and developed country contexts. Few studies have focused on developing countries where chronic, small-scale disruptions are common and resource scarcity means advanced digital technologies are rarely adopted. This research explores how traceability is achieved across upstream actors in two Ghanaian agri-food supply chains and how this affects global SCRes. Social characteristics are shown to influence the risks inherent in supply chains, while traceability is both a direct and indirect SCRes enabler. Informed by the relational view, the roles of relation-specific assets and governance mechanisms in maintaining traceability are explored. Supply chain-wide relation-specific assets are prioritized over dyadic relation-specific assets. This original finding is explained by the importance of maintaining social ties over short-term economic gains in a collectivist culture, leading to greater relational rents in the long term. A novel, informal third-party governance mechanism that reduces formal contracting costs and provides flexibility and continuity to interfirm relationships is also identified, further facilitating the attainment of relational rents. The findings are explained in light of sub-Saharan Africa's collectivist culture, encapsulated in the philosophy of ubuntu. Overall, the research theorizes on achieving supply chain traceability and thus enhancing global SCRes as a sociotechnical system incorporating technological and nontechnological systems that are socially embedded in the local context.",
author = "Ghadafi Razak and Mark Stevenson and Linda Hendry",
year = "2024",
month = oct,
day = "31",
doi = "10.1111/jscm.12330",
language = "English",
volume = "60",
pages = "46--74",
journal = "Journal of Supply Chain Management",
issn = "1523-2409",
publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - “I am because we are”

T2 - The role of Sub-Saharan Africa’s collectivist culture in achieving traceability and global supply chain resilience

AU - Razak, Ghadafi

AU - Stevenson, Mark

AU - Hendry, Linda

PY - 2024/10/31

Y1 - 2024/10/31

N2 - Prior studies on traceability as an enabler of supply chain resilience (SCRes) have focused on large-scale disruptions and developed country contexts. Few studies have focused on developing countries where chronic, small-scale disruptions are common and resource scarcity means advanced digital technologies are rarely adopted. This research explores how traceability is achieved across upstream actors in two Ghanaian agri-food supply chains and how this affects global SCRes. Social characteristics are shown to influence the risks inherent in supply chains, while traceability is both a direct and indirect SCRes enabler. Informed by the relational view, the roles of relation-specific assets and governance mechanisms in maintaining traceability are explored. Supply chain-wide relation-specific assets are prioritized over dyadic relation-specific assets. This original finding is explained by the importance of maintaining social ties over short-term economic gains in a collectivist culture, leading to greater relational rents in the long term. A novel, informal third-party governance mechanism that reduces formal contracting costs and provides flexibility and continuity to interfirm relationships is also identified, further facilitating the attainment of relational rents. The findings are explained in light of sub-Saharan Africa's collectivist culture, encapsulated in the philosophy of ubuntu. Overall, the research theorizes on achieving supply chain traceability and thus enhancing global SCRes as a sociotechnical system incorporating technological and nontechnological systems that are socially embedded in the local context.

AB - Prior studies on traceability as an enabler of supply chain resilience (SCRes) have focused on large-scale disruptions and developed country contexts. Few studies have focused on developing countries where chronic, small-scale disruptions are common and resource scarcity means advanced digital technologies are rarely adopted. This research explores how traceability is achieved across upstream actors in two Ghanaian agri-food supply chains and how this affects global SCRes. Social characteristics are shown to influence the risks inherent in supply chains, while traceability is both a direct and indirect SCRes enabler. Informed by the relational view, the roles of relation-specific assets and governance mechanisms in maintaining traceability are explored. Supply chain-wide relation-specific assets are prioritized over dyadic relation-specific assets. This original finding is explained by the importance of maintaining social ties over short-term economic gains in a collectivist culture, leading to greater relational rents in the long term. A novel, informal third-party governance mechanism that reduces formal contracting costs and provides flexibility and continuity to interfirm relationships is also identified, further facilitating the attainment of relational rents. The findings are explained in light of sub-Saharan Africa's collectivist culture, encapsulated in the philosophy of ubuntu. Overall, the research theorizes on achieving supply chain traceability and thus enhancing global SCRes as a sociotechnical system incorporating technological and nontechnological systems that are socially embedded in the local context.

U2 - 10.1111/jscm.12330

DO - 10.1111/jscm.12330

M3 - Journal article

VL - 60

SP - 46

EP - 74

JO - Journal of Supply Chain Management

JF - Journal of Supply Chain Management

SN - 1523-2409

IS - 4

ER -