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Responsive supply chain : A competitive strategy in a networked economy

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TLDR
In this article, an attempt has been made to analyze both agile manufacturing and supply chain management with the objective of developing a framework for responsive supply chain (RSC), which can be employed as a competitive strategy in a networked economy in which customized products/services are produced with virtual organizations and exchanged using e-commerce.
Abstract
Supply chain management (SCM) has been considered as the most popular operations strategy for improving organizational competitiveness in the twenty-first century. In the early 1990s, agile manufacturing (AM) gained momentum and received due attention from both researchers and practitioners. In the mid-1990s, SCM began to attract interest. Both AM and SCM appear to differ in philosophical emphasis, but each complements the other in objectives for improving organizational competitiveness. For example, AM relies more on strategic alliances/partnerships (virtual enterprise environment) to achieve speed and flexibility. But the issues of cost and the integration of suppliers and customers have not been given due consideration in AM. By contrast, cost is given a great deal of attention in SCM, which focuses on the integration of suppliers and customers to achieve an integrated value chain with the help of information technologies and systems. Considering the significance of both AM and SCM for firms to improve their performance, an attempt has been made in this paper to analyze both AM and SCM with the objective of developing a framework for responsive supply chain (RSC). We compare their characteristics and objectives, review the selected literature, and analyze some case experiences on AM and SCM, and develop an integrated framework for a RSC. The proposed framework can be employed as a competitive strategy in a networked economy in which customized products/services are produced with virtual organizations and exchanged using e-commerce.

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Institutional-based antecedents and performance outcomes of internal and external green supply chain management practices

TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper developed a theoretical model on the different types of institutional pressures motivating manufacturing enterprises to pursue green supply chain management (GSCM) practices and commensurate performance outcomes.
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The influence of green practices on supply chain performance: a case study approach

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Examining the effects of green supply chain management practices and their mediations on performance improvements

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors examined three models used to evaluate the mediation relationships between the external and internal practices of green supply chain management with respect to environmental, economic, and operational performance, and found that the strategic stance of manufacturing enterprises in improving their overall performance and competitive position requires a joint coordination of internal and external GSCM practices.
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Green Human Resource Management and Green Supply Chain Management: linking two emerging agendas

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a synergistic and integrative framework for the GHRM-GSCM relationship and to propose a research agenda for this integration, which emphasizes the implications of the integration for scholars, managers, and practitioners in organizational sustainability and truly sustainable supply chains.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The Agile Supply Chain : Competing in Volatile Markets

TL;DR: In this article, a distinction is drawn between the philosophies of "leanness" and "agility" and the appropriate application of these ideas is discussed, and the key to survival in these changed conditions is through ''agility'' in particular by the creation of responsive supply chains.
Journal ArticleDOI

Leagility: Integrating the lean and agile manufacturing paradigms in the total supply chain

TL;DR: The use of either lean thinking or agile manufacturing has to be combined with a total supply chain strategy particularly considering market knowledge and positioning of the decoupling point as agile manufacturing is best suited to satisfying a fluctuating demand and lean manufacturing requires a level schedule.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mass customization: Literature review and research directions

TL;DR: The literature on mass customization is surveyed and approaches to implementing mass customization are compiled and classified and future research directions are outlined.
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Agile manufacturing: A framework for research and development

TL;DR: An attempt has been made in this paper to review the literature available on AM to identify key strategies and techniques of AM, suggest some future research directions and develop a framework for the development of agile manufacturing systems (AMSs) along four key dimensions which include strategies, technologies, systems and people.
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