scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question
Author

Burcu Sinsoysal

Other affiliations: Ernst & Young
Bio: Burcu Sinsoysal is an academic researcher from Turkcell. The author has contributed to research in topics: Supply chain & Order (exchange). The author has an hindex of 2, co-authored 2 publications receiving 870 citations. Previous affiliations of Burcu Sinsoysal include Ernst & Young.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A review of the OR/MS literature on supply chain disruptions can be found in this paper, where the authors provide an overview of the research questions that have been addressed and a discussion of future research directions.
Abstract: We review the OR/MS literature on supply chain disruptions in order to take stock of the research to date and to provide an overview of the research questions that have been addressed. We first place disruptions in the context of other forms of supply uncertainty and discuss common modeling approaches. We then discuss nearly 150 scholarly works on the topic, organized into six categories: evaluating supply disruptions; strategic decisions; sourcing decisions; contracts and incentives; inventory; and facility location. We conclude with a discussion of future research directions.

553 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors review the OR/MS literature on supply chain disruptions in order to take stock of the research to date and to provide an overview of research questio...
Abstract: We review the Operations Research/Management Science (OR/MS) literature on supply chain disruptions in order to take stock of the research to date and to provide an overview of the research questio...

498 citations


Cited by
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper analyses recent literature and case-studies seeking to bring the discussion further with the help of a conceptual framework for researching the relationships between digitalisation and SC disruptions risks and emerges with an SC risk analytics framework.
Abstract: The impact of digitalisation and Industry 4.0 on the ripple effect and disruption risk control analytics in the supply chain (SC) is studied. The research framework combines the results from two is...

884 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, existing approaches for quantitative supply chain risk management are reviewed by setting the focus on the definition of supply chain risks and related concepts, and a review of these approaches is presented.
Abstract: Economic systems are increasingly prone to complexity and uncertainty. Therefore, making well-informed decisions requires risk analysis, control and mitigation. In some areas such as finance, insurance, crisis management and health care, the importance of considering risk is largely acknowledged and well-elaborated, yet rather heterogeneous concepts and approaches for risk management have been developed. The increased frequency and the severe consequences of past supply chain disruptions have resulted in an increasing interest in risk. This development has led to the adoption of the risk concepts, terminologies and methods from related fields. In this paper, existing approaches for quantitative supply chain risk management are reviewed by setting the focus on the definition of supply chain risk and related concepts.

662 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This paper conceptualizes and comprehensively presents a systematic review of the recent literature on quantitative modeling the SCR while distinctively pertaining it to the original concept of resilience capacity.
Abstract: Supply chain resilience (SCR) manifests when the network is capable to withstand, adapt, and recover from disruptions to meet customer demand and ensure performance. This paper conceptualizes and comprehensively presents a systematic review of the recent literature on quantitative modeling the SCR while distinctively pertaining it to the original concept of resilience capacity. Decision-makers and researchers can benefit from our survey since it introduces a structured analysis and recommendations as to which quantitative methods can be used at different levels of capacity resilience. Finally, the gaps and limitations of existing SCR literature are identified and future research opportunities are suggested.

554 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The VSC model can help firms in guiding their decisions on recovery and re-building of their SCs after global, long-term crises such as the COVID-19 pandemic and can be of value for decision-makers to design SCs that can react adaptively to both positive changes and negative changes.
Abstract: Viability is the ability of a supply chain (SC) to maintain itself and survive in a changing environment through a redesign of structures and replanning of performance with long-term impacts. In this paper, we theorize a new notion-the viable supply chain (VSC). In our approach, viability is considered as an underlying SC property spanning three perspectives, i.e., agility, resilience, and sustainability. The principal ideas of the VSC model are adaptable structural SC designs for supply-demand allocations and, most importantly, establishment and control of adaptive mechanisms for transitions between the structural designs. Further, we demonstrate how the VSC components can be categorized across organizational, informational, process-functional, technological, and financial structures. Moreover, our study offers a VSC framework within an SC ecosystem. We discuss the relations between resilience and viability. Through the lens and guidance of dynamic systems theory, we illustrate the VSC model at the technical level. The VSC model can be of value for decision-makers to design SCs that can react adaptively to both positive changes (i.e., the agility angle) and be able to absorb negative disturbances, recover and survive during short-term disruptions and long-term, global shocks with societal and economical transformations (i.e., the resilience and sustainability angles). The VSC model can help firms in guiding their decisions on recovery and re-building of their SCs after global, long-term crises such as the COVID-19 pandemic. We emphasize that resilience is the central perspective in the VSC guaranteeing viability of the SCs of the future. Emerging directions in VSC research are discussed.

545 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The reasons and mitigation strategies for the ripple effect in the supply chain are observed and a ripple effect control framework that includes redundancy, flexibility and resilience analysis is presented.
Abstract: In this study, the ripple effect in the supply chain is analysed. Ripple effect describes the impact of a disruption propagation on supply chain performance and disruption-based scope of changes in...

469 citations