Wolf | The Nature of Supply Chain Management Research | E-Book | sack.de
E-Book

E-Book, Englisch, 231 Seiten, eBook

Reihe: Einkauf, Logistik und Supply Chain Management

Wolf The Nature of Supply Chain Management Research

Insights from a Content Analysis of International Supply Chain Management Literature from 1990 to 2006

E-Book, Englisch, 231 Seiten, eBook

Reihe: Einkauf, Logistik und Supply Chain Management

ISBN: 978-3-8349-9747-0
Verlag: Betriebswirtschaftlicher Verlag Gabler
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Wasserzeichen (»Systemvoraussetzungen)



Julia Wolf investigates the theoretical aspect of SCM by analyzing the evolution SCM research has undergone and by assessing the question whether SCM research can be considered a scientific paradigm as of today.



Dr. Julia Wolf promovierte bei Prof. Dr. Christopher Jahns am Supply Management Institute (SMI) der European Business School (EBS) in Oestrich-Winkel.
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Research


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Weitere Infos & Material


1;Herausgegeben von Professor Dr. Christopher Jahns;3
2;Foreword;6
3;Acknowledgement;7
4;Table of Contents;8
5;List of Figures;10
6;List of Tables;11
7;List of Abbreviations;13
8;1 Introduction;14
8.1;1.1 Background to the Research;14
8.2;1.2 Research Problem and Main Research Question;15
8.3;1.3 Thesis Structure;18
9;2 Theoretical Foundation;22
9.1;2.1 Definitions;22
9.2;2.2 Fundamentals of Supply Chain Management;26
9.3;2.3 Perspectives on the Analysis of Scientific Disciplines;31
9.4;2.4 Deduction of Research Questions;40
9.5;2.5 Interim Summary;48
10;3 Research Methodology;51
10.1;3.1 Origins and Principles of Core Methodologies;52
10.2;3.2 Steps in the Research Methodology;58
10.3;3.3 Interim Summary;95
11;4 Data Analysis and Evaluation;96
11.1;4.1 Evolution of Supply Chain Management Research Activity;96
11.2;4.2 Philosophy of Science in Supply Chain Management;104
11.3;4.3 The Supply Chain Management Object of Study;108
11.4;4.4 Scientific Practice - Schools of Thought in Supply Chain Management;126
11.5;4.5 Scientific Practice - Methodologies in Supply Chain Management;145
11.6;4.6 Operational Practice in Supply Chain Management Research;151
11.7;4.7 Anomalies and Unresolved Research Questions in Supply Chain Management;156
11.8;4.8 Conclusions on Data Analysis and Evaluation;164
12;5 Summary and Implications;167
12.1;5.1 Answers to Research Questions;167
12.2;5.2 Contributions to Supply Chain Management Research;173
12.3;5.3 Limitations and Directions for Future Research;175
13;References;178
14;Appendices;211
14.1;Appendix 1 - List of Experts;211
14.2;Appendix 2 - Expert Study Questionnaire;211
14.3;Appendix 3 - Sample Articles;212
14.4;Appendix 4 - Codebook;230
14.5;Appendix 5 - Krippendorff’s Alpha Results for Test - Retest;241

Theoretical Foundation.- Research Methodology.- Data Analysis and Evaluation.- Summary and Implications.


3 Research Methodology (S. 38-39)

An important decision in every research is the selection of the appropriate research methodology for the investigation of the posed research questions. In order to facilitate the selection process, Yin (1994) proposed a selection process that classifies appropriate research approaches in terms of the questions that should be answered, the required control of behavioural events and the necessary focus on contemporary events (Yin, 2003, p. 5).

In terms of the type of research questions, he differentiates five basic questions: "who", "what", "where", "how", and "why" questions. A look at the research questions identified in the previous chapter reveals that most of the questions are "what" and "how" questions. "What" questions can be further divided into exploratory and descriptive "what" questions. In this research the former type of research question dominates which justifies an exploratory methodology (Yin, 2003, pp. 5-6). "How" questions tend to be explanatory in nature and require the application of research methodologies that are able to deal with links that can be traced over time such as case studies, historical analyses, archival analyses and experiments.

Case studies and experiments tend to focus on contemporary events and require a high degree of control over behavioural events. As a major interest of this research is to understand the development of SCM research over time, case studies and experiments are of minor relevance as these methodologies have only limited capacity to track historical events in an international scientific community. Therefore, historical and archival analyses remain the most appropriate research methodologies for this thesis.

As historical analyses are less capable of providing answers to "what" questions, an archival analysis is chosen as an appropriate research methodology for this research. Since this project is essentially focused on the scientific developments of SCM as a research field, a major source of knowledge are published research outcomes such as books, articles, conference contributions and so on. Therefore, the following specific types of archival research seem to be of particular interest for this study: Systematic literature review (e.g. Denyer & Tranfield, 2006, Hart, 2005, Tranfield, Denyer & Smart, 2003, Tranfield & Starkey, 1998), citation, co-citation analyses and bibliometrics (e.g. Braam, Moed & van Raan, 1991a, 1991b, Glenisson, Glänzel, Janssens & De Moor, 2005, Shapiro, 1992), and content analysis (e.g. Duriau, Reger & Pfarrer, 2007, Kassarjian, 1977, Kolbe & Burnett, 1991, Krippendorff, 2004).

Citation analysis is based on direct counts of references made to or received from other documents, whereas paired citations are used as measure of association between documents in co-citation analysis (Eom, 2003, p. 8). Citation and co-citation analyses would therefore, be able to understand underlying patterns of SCM research, for example, schools of thought, but the majority of the other research questions such as the methodologies applied and the object of study could not be covered with these methodologies. Therefore, citation analysis, co citation analysis and other bibliometric methodologies are not used for this research.


Dr. Julia Wolf promovierte bei Prof. Dr. Christopher Jahns am Supply Management Institute (SMI) der European Business School (EBS) in Oestrich-Winkel.


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