Buch, Englisch, 580 Seiten, Format (B × H): 172 mm x 249 mm, Gewicht: 1369 g
A Research Anthology
Buch, Englisch, 580 Seiten, Format (B × H): 172 mm x 249 mm, Gewicht: 1369 g
ISBN: 978-1-4094-3508-2
Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
Zielgruppe
Professional Practice & Development
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
Weitere Infos & Material
I: Sustainable Value Chains: Context, Drivers, and Barriers; 1: Environmental Sustainability in the Supply Chain: A Review of Past Literature and Discussion of Potential Drivers and Barriers *; 2: Sustainable Procurement, Institutional Context and Top Management Commitment: An International Public Sector Study; 3: Environmental Research and Development, Public Policy, and Value Chain Management: A Competitive Advantage Perspective; 4: Human Rights in the Value Chain *; 5: The Growth of Private Regulation of Labor Standards in Global Supply Chains: Mission Impossible for Western Small and Medium-Sized Firms? *; 6: Supply Chain Themes in Corporate Social Responsibility Reports *; II: Sustainable Value Chains: Managing Activities; 7: Aligning Goals and Outcomes in Sustainable Supply Chain Management; 8: Setting a Framework for Life Cycle Assessment in Sustainable Technology Development; 9: Creating Socially Responsible and Environmentally Sustainable IT-Enabled Supply Chains; 10: Social and Environmental Responsibility, Sustainability, and Human Resource Practices; 11: Using Codes of Conduct to Help SMEs Manage Supply Chains: The Case of SA8000; 12: Environmental Standards and Certifications in a Value Chain Perspective: NGOs' View on the Legitimacy of the Process; 13: Applying Economic Non-Market Valuation for Sustainable Supply Chain Performance Measurement and Evaluation; III: Sustainable Value Chains: Managing Networks and Collaboration; 14: Green Offerings and Buyer–Supplier Collaboration in Value Chains; 15: Multi-Stakeholder Initiatives in Cotton Value Chains: Towards a Theoretical Framework and a Methodology; 16: Barriers and Facilitators to Developing Sustainable Networks: UK Local and Regional Food *; 17: Incorporating Impoverished Communities in Sustainable Supply Chains; 18: Learning to Improve or Deceive? Chinese Supplier Responses to MNC Codes of Conduct; 19: Understanding Resilience of Complex Value-Chain Networks; IV: Sustainable Value Chains: Integrative Perspectives; 20: Ever Expanding Responsibilities: Upstream and Downstream Corporate Social Responsibility; 21: Meta-Management of Corporate Social Responsibility; 22: When the Social Movement and Global Value Chain Literatures Meet: The Case of Fair Trade; V: Sustainable Value Chains: Specific Sectorial and Industry Perspectives; 23: Contributing to a More Sustainable Coffee Chain: Projects for Small Farmers Instigated by a Multinational Company; 24: Corporate Social Responsibility in the Bank Value Chain; 25: Sustainability in Value Chains: Empirical Evidence from the Greek Food Sector; 26: Standardizing Sustainability: Certification of Tanzanian Biofuel Smallholders in a Global Value Chain; 27: Sustainability in Humanitarian Organisations